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Lecture # 1 The Grand Schema of Things Outline 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. The grand scheme of things Some features of genome-scale science The systems biology paradigm Building foundations Where does (Molecular) Systems Biology fit in to biological hierarchy How does systems biology fit in? THE GRAND SCHEMA OF SCIENCE Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) • Established the existence of discrete inherited elements, now called genes, that determined organism form and function (i.e., the phenotype) • The genotype/phenotype relationship becomes a fundamental concept in biology Fast Forward to the 1950s: genes and human disease • Linus Pauling: Hemoglobin and Sickle-cell anemia • Monogeneic traits can be easily traced – about 150-200 that can be tested for • However, most traits are polygeneic and complex Fast Forward to 1995: birth of the genome era Craig Venter • Whole genome sequences become available • “All” genetic elements in a genome can be identified and characterized – in principle but in practice 2/3 • Genome scale science enabled Putting the Pieces Together: Genome-scale Network Reconstructions, 1997-2000 Christophe Schilling • Organism-specific genomescale metabolic networks – E. coli, H. influenzae, H. pylori • The first high throughput in silico biologists Jeremy Edwards Extended to Eukaryotes (2001-03) • Yeast, w/Jens Nielsen Lab • Iman Famili/Jochen Forster Human metabolism: RECON 1 (2005-07) Global Metabolic Map Comprehensively represents known reactions in human cells Compounds Reactions (3,311) (2,712) Pathways (98) Genes (1,496) Transcripts (1,905) Proteins (2,004) Compartments (7) Network map Mathematical representation Stoichiometric Matrix reaction metabolite S= • • • • Network reconstruction is a BiGG knowledge base Conversion of knowledge into mathematical format Birth of genome-scale (metabolic) systems biology Puts a mechanistic basis for the genotype-phenotype relationship • Dual causality needs to be accounted for – different than physics a 100 years ago Mechanistic genotype-phenotype relationships CONCEPTS IN GENOME-SCALE SCIENCE Molecular to Systems Biology Nature Biotechnology, 18:1147, 2000 Pathway in the Context of a System Methanosarcina barkeri metabolism Examining the Properties of an Individual Pathway L-serine Biosynthesis The intracellular environment is crowed and interconnected placing severe constraints on achievable physiological states Hierarchy in systems biology Chemical causation: Can apply P/C laws and get causality on a small scale Ludwig Boltzmann (18441906) Systems biology: emphasis on modules and understanding of how coherent physiological functions arise from the totality of molecular components Biological causation; genome-scale changes and description of 1000’s of variables. Network and econometric type analysis methods Charles Darwin (1809-1882) Building the G/P-relationship: integrated network reconstructions conceptual operational M Matrix Metastructure E Matrix O Matrix ME Matrix OME Matrix Reconstruction is iterative: History of the E. coli Metabolic Reconstruction Amit Varma Jay Keasling Jeremy Edwards Jennie Reed Adam Feist Jeff Orth Ines Thiele THE SYSTEMS BIOLOGY PARADIGM Systems Biology Paradigm: components -> networks -> computational models -> phenotypes Palsson,BO; Systems Biology, Cambridge University Press 2006 Our Systems Biology Series Data types -- 211 Reconstruction– 211/212 In silico analysis– 212/213 Tailoring to tissues Drug response phenotypes SMILEY Adaptive evolution Disease progression Differentiation Synthetic Biology Metabolic Engineering Towards ‘principles’for molecular biology on genome scale BUILDING FOUNDATIONS Emerging Axioms of COBRA • Axiom #1: All cellular functions are based on chemistry. • Axiom #2: Annotated genome sequences along with experimental data enable the reconstruction of genome-scale metabolic networks. • Axiom #3: Cells function in a context-specific manner. • Axiom #4: Cells operate under a series of constraints. • Axiom #5: Mass (and energy) is conserved. • Axiom #6: Cells evolve under a selection pressure in a given environment. This statement has implicit optimality principles built into it FEMS, 583:3900, 2009 WHERE IN THE BIOLOGICAL HIERARCHY IS (MOLECULAR) SYSTEMS BIOLOGY? Biological Scales and Systems Analysis ecology physiology immunology Molecular systems biology Courtesy of Vito Quaranta, MD; Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN Multi-scale view of E. coli colony cell nucleoid macromolecule Summary • Genes are quanta of inherited information • These quanta influence the functions of organisms • The genotype-phenotype relationship is foundational to biology • Monogenic diseases/traits can easily be traced • Most traits are poly-genic • Full sequencing of genomes gave us the possibility to enumerate all the genes that make up an organism • Systems biology rose to meet the challenge of figuring out how all genes and the biochemical properties of the gene products come together to produce organism functions • The (metabolic) genotype-phenotype relationship now has a mechanistic basis! • Fundamentals of the field are emerging