A test of highly optimized tolerance reveals fragile cell-cycle mechanisms are molecular targets in clinical cancer trials

13Citations
Citations of this article
30Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Robustness, a long recognized property of living systems, allows function in the face of uncertainly while fragility, i.e., extreme sensitivity, can potentially lead to catastrophic failure following seemingly innocuous perturbations. Carlson and Doyle hypothesized that highly-evolved networks, e.g., those involved in cell-cycle regulation, can be resitant to some pertubations while highly sensitive to others. The "robust yet fragile" duality of networks has been termed Highly Optimized Tolerance (HOT) and has been the basis of new lines of inquiry in computational and experimental biology. In this study, we tested the working hypothesis that cell cycle control architectures obey the HOT paradigm. Three cell-cycle models were analyzed using monte-carlo sensitivity analysis. Overall state sensitivity coefficients, which quantify the robustness or fragility of a given mechanism, were calculated using a monte-carlo strategy with three different numerical techniques along with multiple parameter perturbation strategies to control for possible numerical and sampling artifacts. Approximately 65% of the mechanisms in the G1/S restriction point responsible for 95% of the sensitivity, conversely, the G2-DNA damage checkpoint showed a much stronger dependence on a few mechanisms e1 32% or 13 of 40 mechanisms accounted for 95% of the sensitivity. Our analysis predicted that COC25 and cyclin E mechanisms were strongly implicated in G1/S malfunctions, while fragility in the G2/M checkpoint was predicted to be associated with the regulation of the cyclin B-CDK1 complex. Analysis of third model containing both G1/S and G2/M checkpoint logic, predicted in addition to mechanisms already mentioned, that translation and programmed proteolysis were also key fragile susystems. Comparison of the predicted fragile mechanisms with literature and current preclinical trials suggested a strong correlation between efficacy and fragility. Thus, when taken together, these results support the working hypothesis that cell-cycle control architectures are HOT networks and establish the mathematical estimation and subsequent therapeutic exploitation of fragile mechanisms as a novel strategy for anti-cancer lead generation. © 2008 Nayak et al.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Nayak, S., Salim, S., Luan, D., Zai, M., & Varner, J. D. (2008). A test of highly optimized tolerance reveals fragile cell-cycle mechanisms are molecular targets in clinical cancer trials. PLoS ONE, 3(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002016

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free