iScience (Jun 2024)

Signal execution modes emerge in biochemical reaction networks calibrated to experimental data

  • Oscar O. Ortega,
  • Mustafa Ozen,
  • Blake A. Wilson,
  • James C. Pino,
  • Michael W. Irvin,
  • Geena V. Ildefonso,
  • Shawn P. Garbett,
  • Carlos F. Lopez

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 6
p. 109989

Abstract

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Summary: Mathematical models of biomolecular networks are commonly used to study cellular processes; however, their usefulness to explain and predict dynamic behaviors is often questioned due to the unclear relationship between parameter uncertainty and network dynamics. In this work, we introduce PyDyNo (Python dynamic analysis of biochemical networks), a non-equilibrium reaction-flux based analysis to identify dominant reaction paths within a biochemical reaction network calibrated to experimental data. We first show, in a simplified apoptosis execution model, that despite the thousands of parameter vectors with equally good fits to experimental data, our framework identifies the dynamic differences between these parameter sets and outputs three dominant execution modes, which exhibit varying sensitivity to perturbations. We then apply our methodology to JAK2/STAT5 network in colony-forming unit-erythroid (CFU-E) cells and provide previously unrecognized mechanistic explanation for the survival responses of CFU-E cell population that would have been impossible to deduce with traditional protein-concentration based analyses.

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