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. 2022:70:35-69.
doi: 10.1007/978-3-031-06573-6_2.

A Unified Genomic Mechanism of Cell-Fate Change

Affiliations

A Unified Genomic Mechanism of Cell-Fate Change

Masa Tsuchiya et al. Results Probl Cell Differ. 2022.

Abstract

The purpose of our studies is to elucidate the nature of massive control of the whole genome expression with a particular emphasis on cell-fate change. The whole genome expression is coordinated by the emergence of a critical point (CP: a peculiar set of biphasic genes) with the genome acting as an integrated dynamical system. In response to stimuli, the genome expression self-organizes into local sub-, near-, and super-critical states, each exhibiting distinct collective behaviors with its center of mass acting as a local attractor, coexisting with the whole genome attractor (GA). The CP serves as the organizing center of cell-fate change, and its activation makes local perturbation to spread over the genome affecting GA. The activation of CP is in turn elicited by genes with elevated temporal variance (oscillating-mode genes), normally in charge to keep genome expression at pace with microenvironment fluctuations. When oscillation exceeds a given threshold, the CP synchronizes with the GA driving genome expression state transition. The expression synchronization wave invading the entire genome is fostered by the fusion-splitting dynamics of silencing pericentromere-associated heterochromatin domains and the consequent folding-unfolding transitions of transcribing euchromatin domains. The proposed mechanism is a unified step toward a time-evolutional transition theory of biological regulation.

Keywords: Biological statistical mechanics; Cell-fate decision; Critical point; Genome attractor; Genome engine; Genome expression; Self-organized criticality (SOC).

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