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Briefings in Bioinformatics Advance Access originally published online on March 17, 2009
Briefings in Bioinformatics 2009 10(4):450-461; doi:10.1093/bib/bbp010
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

This article appears in the following Briefings in Bioinformatics issue: Special Issue: Challenges in Bioinformatics and Computational Biology [View the issue table of contents]

The virtual cell—a candidate co-ordinator for ‘middle-out’ modelling of biological systems

Dawn C. Walker and Jennifer Southgate

Corresponding author. Prof. J. Southgate, Jack Birch Unit of Molecular Carcinogenesis, Department of Biology, University of York, York YO10 5YW, UK. Tel: +44-190-432-8705; Fax: +44-190-432-8704; E-mail: js35{at}york.ac.uk

Understanding the functioning of biological systems depends on tackling complexity spanning spatial scales from genome to organ to whole organism. The basic unit of life, the cell, acts to co-ordinate information received across these scales and processes the myriad of signals to produce an integrated cellular response. Cells interact with and respond to other cells through direct or indirect contact, resulting in emergent structure and function of tissues and organs. Systems biology has traditionally used either a ‘top-down’ or ‘bottom-up’ approach. However, neither approach takes account of heterogeneity or ‘noise’, which is an inherent feature of cellular behaviour and may have significant impact on system level behaviour. We review existing approaches to modelling that use cellular automata or agent-based methodologies, where individual cells are represented as equivalent virtual entities governed by simple rules. These paradigms allow a direct one-to-one mapping between real and virtual cells that can be exploited in terms of acquiring parameters from experimental systems, or for model validation. Such models are inherently extensible and can be integrated with other modelling modalities (e.g. partial or ordinary differential equations) to model multi-scale phenomena. Alternatively, hierarchical agent models may be used to explore the functions of biological systems across temporal and spatial scales. This review examines individual-based models and the application of the paradigm to explore multi-scale phenomena in biology. In so doing, it demonstrates how cellular-based models have begun to play an important role in the development of ‘middle-out’ models, but with considerable potential for future development.

Keywords: cellular automata, cell biology, computational modelling, emergent behaviour, middle-out modelling, software agent, systems biology

Submitted: December 8, 2008. Received (in revised form): February 3, 2009.


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