Systems Biology: a normal development of biology?

Authors

  • Manuel Cánovas Díaz

Keywords:

Biology, Systems, genome

Abstract

Currently, from the sequencing and annotation of an organism’s genome, we are in a position to know the organization of that genome. However, it is necessary to represent and describe (with easy-to-understand models) how an organism’s genetic information is expressed, how it is regulated, how it is conducted and translated into a specific metabolism, and how that metabolism is regulated, allowing multiple adaptations to different growth environments, and even optimizing gene expression in adaptive processes in those necessary cases (genetic perturbations, mutations, different growth environments, etc)

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References

Alberghina L, Westerho HV (2005). Systems Biology. Denitions and perspectives. Springer. ISBN 13 978 3 540 22968 1.

Maly VI (2009). Systems Biology. Humana Press. Springer Protocols. Methods in Molecular Biology. ISBN 978-1-934115-64-0.

Tomita M, Nishioka T (2005). Metabolomics. The frontier of Systems Biology. Springer-Verlag Tokyo. ISBN 4-431-25121-9 .

Voit EO (2000). Computational Analysis of Biochemical Systems. A practical guide for biochemyst and molecular biologysts. Cambridge

University Press. ISBN 0 521 78087 X.

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Published

2011-12-20

Dimensions

PlumX

How to Cite

Systems Biology: a normal development of biology?. (2011). Encuentros En La Biología, 4(136), 61-62. https://www.revistas.uma.es/index.php/enbio/article/view/18438