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Molecular circuits, biological switches, and nonlinear dose-response relationships.

Signaling motifs (nuclear transcriptional receptors, kinase/phosphatase cascades, G-coupled protein receptors, etc.) have composite dose-response behaviors in relation to concentrations of protein receptors and endogenous signaling molecules. "Molecular circuits" include the biological com...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Andersen, Melvin E, Yang, Raymond S H, French, C Tenley, Chubb, Laura S, Dennison, James E
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12634127
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author Andersen, Melvin E
Yang, Raymond S H
French, C Tenley
Chubb, Laura S
Dennison, James E
author_facet Andersen, Melvin E
Yang, Raymond S H
French, C Tenley
Chubb, Laura S
Dennison, James E
author_sort Andersen, Melvin E
collection PubMed
description Signaling motifs (nuclear transcriptional receptors, kinase/phosphatase cascades, G-coupled protein receptors, etc.) have composite dose-response behaviors in relation to concentrations of protein receptors and endogenous signaling molecules. "Molecular circuits" include the biological components and their interactions that comprise the workings of these signaling motifs. Many of these molecular circuits have nonlinear dose-response behaviors for endogenous ligands and for exogenous toxicants, acting as switches with "all-or-none" responses over a narrow range of concentration. In turn, these biological switches regulate large-scale cellular processes, e.g., commitment to cell division, cell differentiation, and phenotypic alterations. Biologically based dose-response (BBDR) models accounting for these biological switches would improve risk assessment for many nonlinear processes in toxicology. These BBDR models must account for normal control of the signaling motifs and for perturbations by toxic compounds. We describe several of these biological switches, current tools available for constructing BBDR models of these processes, and the potential value of these models in risk assessment.
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spelling pubmed-12412802005-11-08 Molecular circuits, biological switches, and nonlinear dose-response relationships. Andersen, Melvin E Yang, Raymond S H French, C Tenley Chubb, Laura S Dennison, James E Environ Health Perspect Research Article Signaling motifs (nuclear transcriptional receptors, kinase/phosphatase cascades, G-coupled protein receptors, etc.) have composite dose-response behaviors in relation to concentrations of protein receptors and endogenous signaling molecules. "Molecular circuits" include the biological components and their interactions that comprise the workings of these signaling motifs. Many of these molecular circuits have nonlinear dose-response behaviors for endogenous ligands and for exogenous toxicants, acting as switches with "all-or-none" responses over a narrow range of concentration. In turn, these biological switches regulate large-scale cellular processes, e.g., commitment to cell division, cell differentiation, and phenotypic alterations. Biologically based dose-response (BBDR) models accounting for these biological switches would improve risk assessment for many nonlinear processes in toxicology. These BBDR models must account for normal control of the signaling motifs and for perturbations by toxic compounds. We describe several of these biological switches, current tools available for constructing BBDR models of these processes, and the potential value of these models in risk assessment. 2002-12 /pmc/articles/PMC1241280/ /pubmed/12634127 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Andersen, Melvin E
Yang, Raymond S H
French, C Tenley
Chubb, Laura S
Dennison, James E
Molecular circuits, biological switches, and nonlinear dose-response relationships.
title Molecular circuits, biological switches, and nonlinear dose-response relationships.
title_full Molecular circuits, biological switches, and nonlinear dose-response relationships.
title_fullStr Molecular circuits, biological switches, and nonlinear dose-response relationships.
title_full_unstemmed Molecular circuits, biological switches, and nonlinear dose-response relationships.
title_short Molecular circuits, biological switches, and nonlinear dose-response relationships.
title_sort molecular circuits, biological switches, and nonlinear dose-response relationships.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1241280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12634127
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