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Self-Organizing Global Gene Expression Regulated through Criticality: Mechanism of the Cell-Fate Change

BACKGROUND: A fundamental issue in bioscience is to understand the mechanism that underlies the dynamic control of genome-wide expression through the complex temporal-spatial self-organization of the genome to regulate the change in cell fate. We address this issue by elucidating a physically motiva...

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Autores principales: Tsuchiya, Masa, Giuliani, Alessandro, Hashimoto, Midori, Erenpreisa, Jekaterina, Yoshikawa, Kenichi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5173342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27997556
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167912
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author Tsuchiya, Masa
Giuliani, Alessandro
Hashimoto, Midori
Erenpreisa, Jekaterina
Yoshikawa, Kenichi
author_facet Tsuchiya, Masa
Giuliani, Alessandro
Hashimoto, Midori
Erenpreisa, Jekaterina
Yoshikawa, Kenichi
author_sort Tsuchiya, Masa
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A fundamental issue in bioscience is to understand the mechanism that underlies the dynamic control of genome-wide expression through the complex temporal-spatial self-organization of the genome to regulate the change in cell fate. We address this issue by elucidating a physically motivated mechanism of self-organization. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Building upon transcriptome experimental data for seven distinct cell fates, including early embryonic development, we demonstrate that self-organized criticality (SOC) plays an essential role in the dynamic control of global gene expression regulation at both the population and single-cell levels. The novel findings are as follows: i) Mechanism of cell-fate changes: A sandpile-type critical transition self-organizes overall expression into a few transcription response domains (critical states). A cell-fate change occurs by means of a dissipative pulse-like global perturbation in self-organization through the erasure of initial-state critical behaviors (criticality). Most notably, the reprogramming of early embryo cells destroys the zygote SOC control to initiate self-organization in the new embryonal genome, which passes through a stochastic overall expression pattern. ii) Mechanism of perturbation of SOC controls: Global perturbations in self-organization involve the temporal regulation of critical states. Quantitative evaluation of this perturbation in terminal cell fates reveals that dynamic interactions between critical states determine the critical-state coherent regulation. The occurrence of a temporal change in criticality perturbs this between-states interaction, which directly affects the entire genomic system. Surprisingly, a sub-critical state, corresponding to an ensemble of genes that shows only marginal changes in expression and consequently are considered to be devoid of any interest, plays an essential role in generating a global perturbation in self-organization directed toward the cell-fate change. CONCLUSION AND SIGNIFICANCE: ‘Whole-genome’ regulation of gene expression through self-regulatory SOC control complements gene-by-gene fine tuning and represents a still largely unexplored non-equilibrium statistical mechanism that is responsible for the massive reprogramming of genome expression.
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spelling pubmed-51733422017-01-04 Self-Organizing Global Gene Expression Regulated through Criticality: Mechanism of the Cell-Fate Change Tsuchiya, Masa Giuliani, Alessandro Hashimoto, Midori Erenpreisa, Jekaterina Yoshikawa, Kenichi PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: A fundamental issue in bioscience is to understand the mechanism that underlies the dynamic control of genome-wide expression through the complex temporal-spatial self-organization of the genome to regulate the change in cell fate. We address this issue by elucidating a physically motivated mechanism of self-organization. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Building upon transcriptome experimental data for seven distinct cell fates, including early embryonic development, we demonstrate that self-organized criticality (SOC) plays an essential role in the dynamic control of global gene expression regulation at both the population and single-cell levels. The novel findings are as follows: i) Mechanism of cell-fate changes: A sandpile-type critical transition self-organizes overall expression into a few transcription response domains (critical states). A cell-fate change occurs by means of a dissipative pulse-like global perturbation in self-organization through the erasure of initial-state critical behaviors (criticality). Most notably, the reprogramming of early embryo cells destroys the zygote SOC control to initiate self-organization in the new embryonal genome, which passes through a stochastic overall expression pattern. ii) Mechanism of perturbation of SOC controls: Global perturbations in self-organization involve the temporal regulation of critical states. Quantitative evaluation of this perturbation in terminal cell fates reveals that dynamic interactions between critical states determine the critical-state coherent regulation. The occurrence of a temporal change in criticality perturbs this between-states interaction, which directly affects the entire genomic system. Surprisingly, a sub-critical state, corresponding to an ensemble of genes that shows only marginal changes in expression and consequently are considered to be devoid of any interest, plays an essential role in generating a global perturbation in self-organization directed toward the cell-fate change. CONCLUSION AND SIGNIFICANCE: ‘Whole-genome’ regulation of gene expression through self-regulatory SOC control complements gene-by-gene fine tuning and represents a still largely unexplored non-equilibrium statistical mechanism that is responsible for the massive reprogramming of genome expression. Public Library of Science 2016-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC5173342/ /pubmed/27997556 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167912 Text en © 2016 Tsuchiya et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tsuchiya, Masa
Giuliani, Alessandro
Hashimoto, Midori
Erenpreisa, Jekaterina
Yoshikawa, Kenichi
Self-Organizing Global Gene Expression Regulated through Criticality: Mechanism of the Cell-Fate Change
title Self-Organizing Global Gene Expression Regulated through Criticality: Mechanism of the Cell-Fate Change
title_full Self-Organizing Global Gene Expression Regulated through Criticality: Mechanism of the Cell-Fate Change
title_fullStr Self-Organizing Global Gene Expression Regulated through Criticality: Mechanism of the Cell-Fate Change
title_full_unstemmed Self-Organizing Global Gene Expression Regulated through Criticality: Mechanism of the Cell-Fate Change
title_short Self-Organizing Global Gene Expression Regulated through Criticality: Mechanism of the Cell-Fate Change
title_sort self-organizing global gene expression regulated through criticality: mechanism of the cell-fate change
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5173342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27997556
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167912
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