BMC Genomics (Feb 2010)

Collective motions and specific effectors: a statistical mechanics perspective on biological regulation

  • Giuliani Alessandro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-S1-S2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. Suppl 1
p. S2

Abstract

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Abstract Background The interaction of a multiplicity of scales in both time and space is a fundamental feature of biological systems. The complementation of macroscopic (entire organism) and microscopic (molecular biology) views with a mesoscopic level of analysis able to connect the different planes of investigation is urgently needed. This will allow to both obtain a general frame of reference for rationalizing the burden of data coming from high throughput technologies and to derive effective operational views on biological systems. Results The network paradigm in which microscopic level elements (nodes) are each other related by functional links so giving rise to both global (entire network) and local (specific) behavior is a promising metaphor to try and develop a statistical mechanics inspired approach for biological systems. Here we show the application of this paradigm to different systems going from yeast metabolism to murine macrophages response to immune stimulation. Conclusions The need to complement the purely molecular view with mesoscopic approaches is evident in all the studied examples that in turn demonstrate the untenability of the simple ergodic approach dominant in molecular biology in which the data coming from huge ensemble of cells are considered as relative to a single ‘average’ cell.