Literature DB >> 15826673

Modeling embryogenesis and cancer: an approach based on an equilibrium between the autostabilization of stochastic gene expression and the interdependence of cells for proliferation.

Bertrand Laforge1, David Guez, Michael Martinez, Jean-Jacques Kupiec.   

Abstract

A large amount of data demonstrating the stochastic nature of gene expression and cell differentiation has accumulated during the last 40 years. These data suggest that a gene in a cell always has a certain probability of being activated at any time and that instead of leading to on and off switches in an all-or-nothing fashion, the concentration of transcriptional regulators increases or decreases this probability. In order to integrate these data in an appropriate theoretical frame, we have tested the relevance of the selective model of cell differentiation by computer simulation experiments. This model is based on stochastic gene expression controlled by cellular interactions. Our results show that it is readily able to produce tissue organization. A model involving only two cells generated a bi-layer cellular structure of finite growth. Cell death was not a drawback but an advantage because it improved the viability of this bi-layer structure. However, our results also show that cellular interactions cannot be simply based on raw selection between cells. Instead, tissue coordination includes at least two basic components: phenotypic autostabilization (differentiated cells stabilize their own phenotype) and interdependence for proliferation (differentiated cells stimulate the proliferation of alien phenotypes). In this modified autostabilization-selection model, cellular organization and growth arrest result from a quantitative equilibrium between the parameters controlling these two processes. An imbalance leads to tissue disorganization and invasive cancer-like growth. These findings suggest that cancer does not result solely from mutations in the cancerous cell but from the progressive addition of several small alterations of the equilibrium between autostabilization and interdependence for proliferation. In this frame, it is not solely the cancerous cell that is abnormal. The whole organism is involved. Tumor growth is a local effect of an imbalance between all the factors involved in tissue organization.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15826673     DOI: 10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2004.11.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prog Biophys Mol Biol        ISSN: 0079-6107            Impact factor:   3.667


  14 in total

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3.  Systems medicine: the future of medical genomics and healthcare.

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4.  Distinct sequential cell behaviours direct primitive endoderm formation in the mouse blastocyst.

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6.  Stochastic variation of transcript abundance in C57BL/6J mice.

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Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2011-03-30       Impact factor: 3.969

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8.  Bistable cell fate specification as a result of stochastic fluctuations and collective spatial cell behaviour.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-12-28       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 9.  Biophysics and systems biology.

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Journal:  Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci       Date:  2010-03-13       Impact factor: 4.226

10.  The origin of phenotypic heterogeneity in a clonal cell population in vitro.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2007-04-25       Impact factor: 3.240

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