Journal of Biomedical Science and Engineering

Volume 3, Issue 10 (October 2010)

ISSN Print: 1937-6871   ISSN Online: 1937-688X

Google-based Impact Factor: 1.68  Citations  

Extending cell cycle synchrony and deconvolving population effects in budding yeast through an analysis of volume growth with a structured Leslie model

HTML  Download Download as PDF (Size: 1655KB)  PP. 987-1001  
DOI: 10.4236/jbise.2010.310129    4,846 Downloads   8,921 Views  Citations

Affiliation(s)

.

ABSTRACT

Budding yeast are a fundamental organism at the center of systems biology research. Understanding the physiology and kinetics of their growth and division is fundamental to the design of models of gene regulation and the interpretation of experimental measurements. We have developed a Leslie model with structured volume and age classes to understand population growth and cell cycle synchrony in budding yeast. The model exhibits broad agreement with a variety of experimental data. The model is easily annotated with volume milestones and cell cycle phases and at least three distinct goals are realizable: 1) One can investigate how any single cell property manifests itself at the population level. 2) One can deconvolve observed population averages into individual cell signals structured by volume and age. 3) One can investigate controllability of the population dynamics. We focus on the latter question. Our model was initially designed to answer the question: Can continuous volume filtration extend synchrony? To date, most general experimental methods can produce an initially synchronous population whose synchrony decays rapidly over three or four cell cycles. Our model predicts that continuous volume filtration can extend this maintenance of synchrony by an order of magnitude. Our data inform the development of simple fluidic devices to extend synchrony in continuous culture at all scales from nanophysiometers to bioreactors.

Share and Cite:

Stowers, C. and M. Boczko, A. (2010) Extending cell cycle synchrony and deconvolving population effects in budding yeast through an analysis of volume growth with a structured Leslie model. Journal of Biomedical Science and Engineering, 3, 987-1001. doi: 10.4236/jbise.2010.310129.

Cited by

[1] Reference channel-based microfluidic resistance sensing for single yeast cell volume growth measurement
Microfluidics and Nanofluidics, 2017
[2] Dynamical Systems In Biological Modeling: Clustering In the Cell Division Cycle of Yeast
2015
[3] Noise-induced dispersion and breakup of clusters in cell cycle dynamics
Journal of theoretical biology, 2014
[4] A Microfluidic Cell Size/Density Sensor by Resistive Pulse Detection
Electroanalysis, 2013
[5] Simultaneous on-chip DC dielectrophoretic cell separation and quantitative separation performance characterization
Analytical chemistry, 2012
[6] Clustering in cell cycle dynamics with general response/signaling feedback
Journal of theoretical biology, 2012
[7] The structure of populations of budding yeast in response to feedback
Hypotheses in the Life Sciences, 2011
[8] ODE, RDE and SDE models of cell cycle dynamics and clustering in yeast
Journal of biological dynamics, 2010
[9] Microfluidic Resistance Sensing for Single Cell Growth Rate Measurements and Cell Separation Characterization
2010

Copyright © 2025 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.