On the Origin of Biomolecular Networks

Biomolecular networks have already found great utility in characterizing complex biological systems arising from pairwise interactions amongst biomolecules. Here, we explore the important and hitherto neglected role of information asymmetry in the genesis and evolution of such pairwise biomolecular...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Heeralal Janwa, Steven E. Massey, Julian Velev, Bud Mishra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Genetics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fgene.2019.00240/full
id doaj-4b13cfae75b04ebc8e0f8751f69c7ffa
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4b13cfae75b04ebc8e0f8751f69c7ffa2020-11-25T00:52:54ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Genetics1664-80212019-04-011010.3389/fgene.2019.00240437903On the Origin of Biomolecular NetworksHeeralal Janwa0Steven E. Massey1Julian Velev2Bud Mishra3Department of Mathematics, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, PR, United StatesDepartment of Biology, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, PR, United StatesDepartment of Physics, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, PR, United StatesDepartments of Computer Science, Mathematics and Cell Biology, Courant Institute and NYU School of Medicine, New York University, New York City, NY, United StatesBiomolecular networks have already found great utility in characterizing complex biological systems arising from pairwise interactions amongst biomolecules. Here, we explore the important and hitherto neglected role of information asymmetry in the genesis and evolution of such pairwise biomolecular interactions. Information asymmetry between sender and receiver genes is identified as a key feature distinguishing early biochemical reactions from abiotic chemistry, and a driver of network topology as biomolecular systems become more complex. In this context, we review how graph theoretical approaches can be applied not only for a better understanding of various proximate (mechanistic) relations, but also, ultimate (evolutionary) structures encoded in such networks from among all types of variations they induce. Among many possible variations, we emphasize particularly the essential role of gene duplication in terms of signaling game theory, whereby sender and receiver gene players accrue benefit from gene duplication, leading to a preferential attachment mode of network growth. The study of the resulting dynamics suggests many mathematical/computational problems, the majority of which are intractable yet yield to efficient approximation algorithms, when studied through an algebraic graph theoretic lens. We relegate for future work the role of other possible generalizations, additionally involving horizontal gene transfer, sexual recombination, endo-symbiosis, etc., which enrich the underlying graph theory even further.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fgene.2019.00240/fullbiomoleculesregulation and communicationinteraction (binary) relationshipnetwork modelnetwork analysisspectral analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heeralal Janwa
Steven E. Massey
Julian Velev
Bud Mishra
spellingShingle Heeralal Janwa
Steven E. Massey
Julian Velev
Bud Mishra
On the Origin of Biomolecular Networks
Frontiers in Genetics
biomolecules
regulation and communication
interaction (binary) relationship
network model
network analysis
spectral analysis
author_facet Heeralal Janwa
Steven E. Massey
Julian Velev
Bud Mishra
author_sort Heeralal Janwa
title On the Origin of Biomolecular Networks
title_short On the Origin of Biomolecular Networks
title_full On the Origin of Biomolecular Networks
title_fullStr On the Origin of Biomolecular Networks
title_full_unstemmed On the Origin of Biomolecular Networks
title_sort on the origin of biomolecular networks
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Genetics
issn 1664-8021
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Biomolecular networks have already found great utility in characterizing complex biological systems arising from pairwise interactions amongst biomolecules. Here, we explore the important and hitherto neglected role of information asymmetry in the genesis and evolution of such pairwise biomolecular interactions. Information asymmetry between sender and receiver genes is identified as a key feature distinguishing early biochemical reactions from abiotic chemistry, and a driver of network topology as biomolecular systems become more complex. In this context, we review how graph theoretical approaches can be applied not only for a better understanding of various proximate (mechanistic) relations, but also, ultimate (evolutionary) structures encoded in such networks from among all types of variations they induce. Among many possible variations, we emphasize particularly the essential role of gene duplication in terms of signaling game theory, whereby sender and receiver gene players accrue benefit from gene duplication, leading to a preferential attachment mode of network growth. The study of the resulting dynamics suggests many mathematical/computational problems, the majority of which are intractable yet yield to efficient approximation algorithms, when studied through an algebraic graph theoretic lens. We relegate for future work the role of other possible generalizations, additionally involving horizontal gene transfer, sexual recombination, endo-symbiosis, etc., which enrich the underlying graph theory even further.
topic biomolecules
regulation and communication
interaction (binary) relationship
network model
network analysis
spectral analysis
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fgene.2019.00240/full
work_keys_str_mv AT heeralaljanwa ontheoriginofbiomolecularnetworks
AT stevenemassey ontheoriginofbiomolecularnetworks
AT julianvelev ontheoriginofbiomolecularnetworks
AT budmishra ontheoriginofbiomolecularnetworks
_version_ 1725240272922607616