Abstract

The timing of DNA synthesis, mitosis and cell division is regulated by a complex network of biochemical reactions that control the activities of a family of cyclin-dependent kinases. The temporal dynamics of this reaction network is typically modeled by nonlinear differential equations describing the rates of the component reactions. This approach provides exquisite details about molecular regulatory processes but is hampered by the need to estimate realistic values for the many kinetic constants that determine the reaction rates. It is difficult to estimate these kinetic constants from available experimental data. To avoid this problem, modelers often resort to ‘qualitative’ modeling strategies, such as Boolean switching networks, but these models describe only the coarsest features of cell cycle regulation. In this paper we describe a hybrid approach that combines the best features of continuous differential equations and discrete Boolean networks. Cyclin abundances are tracked by piecewise linear differential equations for cyclin synthesis and degradation. Cyclin synthesis is regulated by transcription factors whose activities are represented by discrete variables (0 or 1) and likewise for the activities of the ubiquitin-ligating enzyme complexes that govern cyclin degradation. The discrete variables change according to a predetermined sequence, with the times between transitions determined in part by cyclin accumulation and degradation and as well by exponentially distributed random variables. The model is evaluated in terms of flow cytometry measurements of cyclin proteins in asynchronous populations of human cell lines. The few kinetic constants in the model are easily estimated from the experimental data. Using this hybrid approach, modelers can quickly create quantitatively accurate, computational models of protein regulatory networks in cells.

Highlights

  • The cell division cycle is the fundamental physiological process by which cells grow, replicate, and divide into two daughter cells that receive all the information and machinery necessary to repeat the process under suitable conditions [1]

  • Our goal is to retain the elegance of the Boolean representation of the switching network, while introducing continuous variables for cell size, cell age, and cyclin composition, in order to create a model that can be compared in quantitative detail to experimental measurements with a minimal number of kinetic parameters that must be estimated from the data

  • The model is inspired by the work of Li et al [14], who proposed a robust Boolean model of cell cycle regulation in budding yeast

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Summary

Introduction

The cell division cycle is the fundamental physiological process by which cells grow, replicate, and divide into two daughter cells that receive all the information (genes) and machinery (proteins, organelles, etc.) necessary to repeat the process under suitable conditions [1]. This cycle of growth and division underlies all biological expansion, development and reproduction. Mitosis (M phase) is further subdivided into stages: prophase (chromatin condensation, spindle formation, and nuclear envelope breakdown), prometaphase (chromosome attachment and congression), metaphase (chromosome residence at the mid-plane of the spindle), anaphase (sister chromatid separation and movement to opposite poles of the spindle), telophase (re-formation of the nuclear envelopes), and cytokinesis (cell division). We shall refer to the sub-phases G1-pm and G1-ps as ‘G1a’ and ‘G1b’ respectively

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