Engineering cellular computations through biophysical design
ORAL
Abstract
It is known that living cells use complex biochemical networks to perform sophisticated computational tasks. Yet, a major question in synthetic and systems biology remains: How are network level computational properties encoded in the biophysics of protein-protein interactions (PPIs)? We address this question by developing a new computational framework relating the thermodynamics of PPIs to network signaling properties in a simplified synthetic biochemical system inspired by the “reader-writer-eraser" signaling paradigm. Our computational framework allows us both to rationally design a desired input-output relation and to identify networks that optimize information transmission (InfoMax). More generally, our work shows that complex computational and information processing tasks can be programmed in cellular signaling circuits by manipulating biophysical parameters.
*PM and CHW were supported by NIH NIGMS grant 1R35GM119461, a Simons Investigator award in the Mathematical Modeling of Living Systems (MMLS), and a Scialog grant from the Simons Foundation and Research Corporation (all to PM).
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Presenters
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Ching-Hao Wang
- Physics, Boston Univ
- Boston University