Evolution and Biophysics of the \textit{Escherichia coli lac} Operon
ORAL
Abstract
To understand, predict, and control the evolution of living organisms, we consider biophysical effects and molecular network architectures. The lactose utilization system of \textit{E. coli} is among the most well-studied molecular networks in biology, making it an ideal candidate for such studies. Simulations show how the genetic architecture of the wild-type operon attenuates large metabolic intermediate fluctuations that are predicted to occur in an equivalent system with the component genes on separate operons. Quantification of gene expression in the \textit{lac} operon evolved in growth conditions containing constant lactose, alternating with glucose, or constant glucose, shows characteristic gene expression patterns depending on conditions. We are simulating these conditions to show context-dependent biophysical sources and costs of different lac operon architectures.
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Authors
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J. Christian Ray
The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center
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Oleg Igoshin
Rice University
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Selwyn Quan
Stanford University
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Russell Monds
Stanford University
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Tim Cooper
The University of Houston
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Gabor Balazsi and Gurol Suel
Department of Systems Biology, UT M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, MD Anderson Cancer Center