Reaction network modeling of complex ecological interactions: endosymbiosis and multilevel regulation
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2021Metadata
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Veloz, Tomás
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Reaction network modeling of complex ecological interactions: endosymbiosis and multilevel regulation
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Abstract
Endosymbiosis is a type of symbiosis where one species of microscopic scale inhabits the cell of another species of a larger scale, such that the exchange of metabolic byproducts produces mutual benefit. These benefits can occur at different biological levels. For example, endosymbiosis promotes efficiency of the cell metabolism, cell replication, and the generation of a macroscopic layer that protects the organism from its predators. Therefore, modeling endosymbiosis requires a complex-systems and multilevel approach. We propose a model of endosymbiosis based on reaction networks, where species of the reaction network represent either ecological species, resources, or conditions for the ecological interactions to happen, and the endosymbiotic interaction mechanisms are represented by different sequences of reactions (processes) in the reaction network. As an example, we develop a toy model of the coral endosymbiotic interaction. The model considers two reaction networks, representing biochemical traffic and cellular proliferation levels, respectively. In addition, the model incorporates top-down and bottom-up regulation mechanisms that stabilizes the endosymbiotic interaction.
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John Templeton Foundation "The Origins of Goal-Directedness: A Formal Scenario Based on Chemical Organization Theory and Cybernetics" 61733
ANID-PFCHA/Doctorado Nacional/2019 21191885
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Artículo de publícación WoS
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Complexity Volume 2021, Article ID 8760937, 12 pages
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