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Network Motifs: simple Building Blocks of Complex Networks

Network Motifs: simple Building Blocks of Complex Networks. R. Milo et. al. Science 298 , 824 (2002) Y. Lahini. The cell and the environment. Cells need to react to their environment Reaction is by synthesizing task-specific proteins, on demand.

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Network Motifs: simple Building Blocks of Complex Networks

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  1. Network Motifs: simple Building Blocks of Complex Networks R. Milo et. al. Science 298, 824 (2002) Y. Lahini

  2. The cell and the environment • Cells need to react to their environment • Reaction is by synthesizing task-specific proteins, on demand. • The solution – regulated transcription network • E. Coli – 1000 protein types at any given moment >4000 genes (or possible protein types) – need regulatory mechanism to select the active set • We are interested in the design principles of this network

  3. Protein RNA DNA DNA – the instruction manual, 4-letter chemical alphabet – A,G,T,C Proteins are encoded by DNA translation transcription

  4. protein Gene Regulation • Proteins are encoded by the DNA of the organism. • Proteins regulate expression of other proteins by interacting with the DNA Transcription factor external signal DNA Coding region promoter region ACCGTTGCAT

  5. Two types of Transcription Factors: 1.Activators X No transcription X Y gene Y X binding site Y Y Sub-second Y Y Sx Seconds X* X INCREASED TRANSCRIPTION X* Hours Bound activator Separation of time scales: TF activation level is in steady state

  6. Two types of Transcription Factors: Repressors X Y Y Y Unbound repressor Y Y X Bound repressor Sx X* X No transcription X* Bound repressor

  7. Equations of gene regulation If X* regulates Y, the net production rate of gene Y is α- Dilution/degradation rate K – activation coefficient [concentration]; related to the affinity β – maximal expression level Step approximation – gene is on (rate β) or off (rate 0) with threshold K

  8. X Y The gene regulatory network of E. coli • Nodes are proteins (or the genes that encode them) • Edges = regulatory relation between two proteins

  9. Analyzing networks • The idea- patterns that occur in the real network much more then in a randomized network, must have functional significance. • The randomized networks share the same number of edges and number of nodes, but edges are assigned at random

  10. The known E. Coli transcription network

  11. A random graph based on the same node statistics

  12. 3-node network motif – the feedforward loop Nreal=40 Nrand=7±3

  13. The feedforward loop : a sign sensitive filter The feedforward loop is a filter for transient signals while allowing fast shutdown Mangan, Alon, PNAS, JMB, 2003

  14. OFF pulse The Feedforward loop : a sign sensitive filter Vs. =lacZYA =araBAD Mangan, Alon, PNAS, JMB, 2003

  15. Z1 Z2 Z3 Z1 Z2 Z3 Single Input Module • Temporal and expression level program generator • The temporal order is encoded in a hierarchy of thresholds • Expression levels hierarchy is encoded in hierarchy of promoter activities

  16. Single Input Module motif is responsible for exact timing in the flagella assembly

  17. Single Input Module motif is responsible for exact timing in the flagella assembly Kalir et. al., science,2001

  18. The gene regulatory network of E. coli Single input modules Feed-forward loops • Shallow network, few long cascades. • Modular Shen-Orr et. al. Nature Genetics 2002

  19. Evolution of transcription networks In 1 day, 1010 copies of e-coli, 1010 replication of DNA. Mutation rate is 10-9 10 mutations per letter in the population per day Even single DNA base change in the promoter can change the activation/repression rate Edges can be lost or gained (i.e. selected) easily.

  20. Links between WebPages – a completely different set of motifs is found • WebPages are nodes and Links are directed edges • 3 node results:

  21. Structure of a nematode neuronal circuitry Head Sensory Ventral Cord Motor Ring Motor [White, Brenner 1986; Durbin, Thesis, 1987]

  22. Neurons and transcription share similar motifs C. elegans

  23. Summary • The production of proteins in cells is regulated using a complex regulation network • Network motifs: simple building blocks of complex networks • An algorithm to identify network motifs • Example: the transcription network of E. coli. • The feed forward loop as a sign sensitive filter • The single input module: exact temporal ordering of protein expression

  24. Thanks

  25. Equations of gene regulation • If X* regulates Y, the net production rate of gene Y is • α- Dilution/degradation rate • K – activation coefficient [concentration]; related to the affinity • Β – maximal expression level • n – the Hill parameter (steepness of the response, usually 1-4) • Step approximation – gene is on (rate β) or off (rate 0) with threshold K

  26. Actors’ web

  27. Mathematicians &Computer Scientists

  28. Sexual contacts: M. E. J. Newman, The structure and function of complex networks, SIAM Review 45, 167-256 (2003).

  29. High school dating: Data drawn from Peter S. Bearman, James Moody, and Katherine Stovel visualized by Mark Newman

  30. Internet as measured by Hal Burch and Bill Cheswick's Internet Mapping Project.

  31. Metabolic networks KEGG database: http://www.genome.ad.jp/kegg/kegg2.html

  32. Transcription regulatory networks Single-celled eukaryote:S. cerevisiae Bacterium:E. coli

  33. C. elegans neuronal net

  34. X1 X2 X3 … Xn Z1 Z2 Z3 … Zm Dense Overlapping Regulons (DOR) Bi-fan Nreal = 203 Nrand = 47±12 Z Score = 13 Array of gates for hard-wired decision making Buchler, Gerland, Hwa, PNAS 2003 Setty, Mayo, Surette, Alon, PNAS 2003

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