Delayed self-regulation and timedependent chemical drive leads to novel states in epigenetic landscapes

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Abstract

The epigenetic pathway of a cell as it differentiates from a stem cell state to a mature lineage-committed one has been historically understood in terms of Waddington's landscape, consisting of hills and valleys. The smooth top and valley-strewn bottom of the hill represent their undifferentiated and differentiated states, respectively. Although mathematical ideas rooted in nonlinear dynamics and bifurcation theory have been used to quantify this picture, the importance of time delays arising from multistep chemical reactions or cellular shape transformations have been ignored so far.We argue that this feature is crucial in understanding cell differentiation and explore the role of time delay in a model of a single-gene regulatory circuit.We showthat the interplay of time-dependent drive and delay introduces a new regime where the system shows sustained oscillations between the two admissible steady states. We interpret these results in the light of recent perplexing experiments on inducing the pluripotent state in mouse somatic cells.We also comment on howsuch an oscillatory state can provide a framework for understanding more general feedback circuits in cell development.

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Mitra, M. K., Taylor, P. R., Hutchison, C. J., McLeish, T. C. B., & Chakrabarti, B. (2014). Delayed self-regulation and timedependent chemical drive leads to novel states in epigenetic landscapes. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 11(100). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2014.0706

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