Toward Rigorous Comprehension of Biological Complexity: Modeling, Execution, and Visualization of Thymic T-Cell Maturation
- Sol Efroni1,2,3,
- David Harel1, and
- Irun R. Cohen2
Abstract
One of the problems biologists face is a data set too large to comprehend in full. Experimenters generate data at an ever-growing pace, each from their own niche of interest. Current theories are each able, at best, to capture and model only a small part of the data. We aim to develop a general approach to modeling that will help broaden biological understanding. T-cell maturation in the thymus is a telling example of the accumulation of experimental data into a large disconnected data set. The thymus is responsible for the maturation of stem cells into mature T cells, and its complexity divides research into different fields, for example, cell migration, cell differentiation, histology, electron microscopy, biochemistry, molecular biology, and more. Each field forms its own viewpoint and its own set of data. In this study we present the results of a comprehensive integration of large parts of this data set. The integration is performed in a two-tiered visual manner. First, we use the visual language of Statecharts, which makes specification precise, legible, and executable on computers. We then set up a moving graphical interface that dynamically animates the cells, their receptors, the different gradients, and the interactions that constitute thymic maturation. This interface also provides a means for interacting with the simulation.
Footnotes
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Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.1215303.
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[Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org and at www.wisdom.weizmann.ac.il/sol/sysbio2002/.]
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↵3 Corresponding author. E-MAIL sol.efroni{at}weizmann.ac.il; FAX972-8-9342945.
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- Accepted September 3, 2003.
- Received January 23, 2003.
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press











