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Genetic vehicle comprising majority of lowly expressed genes guides cell fate decision
Author(s) -
Masa Tsuchiya,
Vincent Piras,
Masaru Tomita,
Alessandro Giuliani,
Kumar Selvarajoo
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
nature precedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1756-0357
DOI - 10.1038/npre.2010.4401.1
Subject(s) - attractor , gene , genome , retinoic acid , biology , cell fate determination , correlation , computational biology , genetics , evolutionary biology , mathematics , transcription factor , mathematical analysis , geometry
Cells remarkably take a specific differentiation path among the multiple possibilities that can arise through the multi-dimensional regulation of genome activities. Such deterministic processes suggest the existence of cellular attractors. However, the origins and drivers of the attractors still remain elusive. Here we analyzed the temporal neutrophil differentiation microarray data for two different stimuli, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and all-trans-retinoic acid (atRA), and expressed their collective dynamics by temporal Pearson correlation and mutual information coordinates. We constructed ensemble of the genes which showed reduction of correlation fluctuations following the inverse square root law. Evaluating their temporal probability density distributions resulted in the emergence of distinct high density localizations from non-localized low density spread distributions, forming attractor cores for both atRA and DMSO. These attractor cores overlapped, pointing to the existence of a neutrophil cell fate attractor. Notably, we found the localizations of correlation distributions for the majority of lowly expressed genes (LEGs) ensembles overlapped with the whole genome attractor cores, while the remaining genomes’ localizations did not overlap. Therefore, we postulate the existence of genetic vehicle, made up mainly of LEGs, for the guidance of cell fate

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