This paper includes a conceptual framework for cell cycle modeling into which the experimenter can map observed data and evaluate mechanisms of cell cycle control. The basic model exhibits qualitative stability, meaning that regardless of magnitudes of system parameters its instances are guaranteed to be stable in the sense that all feasible trajectories converge to a certain trajectory. Qualitative stability can also be described by the signs of real parts of eigenvalues of the system matrix. On the biological side, the resulting model can be tuned to approximate experimental data pertaining to human fibroblast cell lines treated with ionizing radiation, with or without disabled DNA damage checkpoints. Together these properties validate a fundamental, first order systems view of cell dynamics. © the author(s), publisher and licensee Libertas Academica Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Jeffries, C. D., Johnson, C. R., Zhou, T., Simpson, D. A., & Kaufmann, W. K. (2012). A flexible and qualitatively stable model for cell cycle dynamics including DNA damage effects. Gene Regulation and Systems Biology, 2012(6), 55–66. https://doi.org/10.4137/grsb.s8476
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.