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Models and Theory in Molecular Cell Biology Reinhart Heinrich Dept. of Theoretical Biophysics, Humboldt University Berlin Invalidenstrasse 42, D-10115 Berlin At present mathematical modelling in systems biology focusses to a large extent on supramolecular processes taking place within individual cells. These processes are generally organised in the form of reaction networks, such as metabolic pathways, signal transduction networks and gene regulatory networks. In contrast to chemical reactions of inanimate nature the biochemical processes are the outcome of evolutionary selection and are therefore assumed to display specific structural and dynamical properties. I will give an introductory overview on different networks which are of central biological interest and are amenable to detailed mathematical treatment. These are two signal transduction pathways called MAPK pathway and Wnt pathway which, upon stimulation by extracellular ligands (hormones, growth factors etc.), control cell division and cell differentiation, respectively. While these processes rely on mutual activation and inhibition of interacting proteins, other processes are based on transiently assembled multiprotein complexes, which perform, for example, DNA repair after damaging. All these processes are of strong medical interest, since erroneous functioning may result in tumor formation, for example colorectal cancer (Wnt pathway). I will demonstrate how the deterministic and stochastic properties of such networks as observed experimentally can be adequately simulated on the basis of systems of nonlinear differential equations (1-3) or systems of Master equations. Only very recently intracellular transport and sorting of proteins taking place via vesicular transport between different organelles (endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus etc. ) became a subject of mathematical modelling (4). Whereas modelling of specific cellular processes is already prevailing there are only a few attempts to arrive at more general conclusions concerning structure and dynamics of cellular processes. One theoretical approach applies optimization principles which may explain, for example, the specific kinetic characteristics of single enzymes allowing high catalytic rates, the most efficient distribution of enzyme amounts along pathways, special topological properties, such as the location of ATP - consuming and ATP - producing reactions for fast energy interconversion, or the specifics of temporal gene expression ("just-in-time transcription of genes"). Several problems of that kind can be treated by evolutionary algorithms (5). Recently, we developed a method for analysing the structural design of large scale metabolic networks (6, 7). It is based on a network expansion which starts from a set of seed compounds and ends in the scope of this seed, that is, all metabolites which can be synthesized from these initial compounds. The method allows to identify critical compounds and reactions, to characterize the robustness of the network against enzyme deletions, to quantify distances between thousands of reactions or compounds etc. When starting from small chemical building blocks network expansions allow to formulate hypotheses concerning the temporal order of the emergence of metabolic pathways in the early phase of evolution (7). (1) Heinrich, R., Neel, B.G., and Rapoport, T.A. (2002) Mathematical models of protein kinase signal transduction. Mol. Cell 9, 957-970. (2) Lee, E., Salic, A., Krüger, R., Heinrich, R., and Kirschner, M. W. (2003) The roles of APC and axin derived from experimental and theoretical analysis of the Wnt pathway. PLOS Biology 1, 116-132. (3) Politi, A., Moné, M.J., Houtsmuller, A.B., Hoogstraten, D., Vermeulen, W., Heinrich, R., and van Driel, R. (2005) Mathematical Modeling of Nucleotide Excision Repair Reveals Efficiency of Sequential Assembly Strategies. Mol. Cell 19, 679-690. (4) Heinrich, R. and Rapoport, T. (2005) Generation of nonidentical compartments in vesicular transport systems. J. Cell Biol. 168, 271-280. (5) Klipp, E., Heinrich, R., and Holzhütter, H.-G. (2002) Prediction of temporal gene expression. Metabolic optimization by re-distribution of enzyme activities. Eur. J. Biochem. 269, 5406-5413. (6) Binder, B. and Heinrich, R. (2005) Structural and Dynamical Analyses of the Kinase Network Derived from the Transpath Database. Genome Informatics 16, 164-173 (7) Handorf, T., Ebenhöh, and Heinrich, R. (2005) Expanding Metabolic Networks: Scopes of Compounds, Robustness, and Evolution. Journal of Molecular Evolution 61, 498-512.