COMPUTATIONAL
CELL BIOLOGY
July 2 - 22, 2010
Application Deadline: April 15, 2010
Instructors:
Timothy Elston, University of North Carolina
Leslie
Loew, University of Connecticut Health Center
Gregory
Smith, College of William and Mary
John
Tyson, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State
University
Computational
cell biology is the field of study that applies the mathematics
of dynamical systems together with computer simulation techniques
to the study of cellular processes. The field encompasses
several topics that have been studied long enough to be
well established in their own right such as calcium signaling,
molecular motors and cell motility, the cell cycle, and
gene expression during development. In addition to providing
a recognizable larger community for topics such as these,
this course will provide a base for the development of newer
areas of inquiry – for example the dynamics of intracellular
second-messenger signaling, of programmed cell death, of
mitotic chromosome movements, and of synthetic gene networks.
Unlike computational genomics or bioinformatics, computational
cell biology is focused on simulation of the molecular machinery
(genes-proteins-metabolites) that underlie the physiological
behavior (input-output characteristics) of living cells.
The three week course in Computational Cell Biology will
incorporate a series of didactic lectures on the mathematics
of dynamical systems, computational simulation techniques,
cell biology and molecular biology. Practicing theoreticians
and experimentalists will rotate in for 1-3 day visits during
the course to give lectures and interact with the students.
Midway through the course, students will select an area
for independent study, and the focus of the last week of
the course will largely be on these projects, supplemented
by continued visiting lecturers.
Speakers
for 2009 included:
Upi Bhalla,NCBS,
India
Avrama Blackwell, Krasnow Institute, George Mason University
Gul
Civelekoglu-Scholey, University of California, Davis
Eric Cytrynbaum, University of British Columbia, Canada
Genevieve Dupont, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
G. Bard Ermentrout, University of Pittsburgh
Jeff Hasty, University of California San Diego
Jason Haugh, NC State University
Michael Hucka, Caltech
Ravi Iyengar, Mount Sinai School of Medicine
James Keener, University of Utah
Galit Lahav, Harvard University
James Lechleiter, University of Texas San Antonio
Pedro Mendes, University of Manchester, UK
Ion Moraru, University of Connecticut Health Center
Charlie Peskin, New York University
Robert Phair, Integrative Bioinformatics
Joseph Pomerening, Indiana University
James Schaff, University of Connecticut Health Center
Arthur Sherman, NIH - NIDDK
Boris Slepchenko, University of Connecticut Health Center
David Terman, Ohio State University
Visiting faculty will change from year to year, and the
specific topics covered will vary. Potential areas include:
Fundamentals
-Cell biology (signaling, differentiation, motility, cell
cycle,
apoptosis)
-Molecular biology (gene expression, posttranslational modification,
proteolysis)
-Mathematical biology (dynamical systems, phase plane, elementary
bifurcations)
-Computational tools (numerical simulation, software, SBML)
Advanced Topics
Sniffers, buzzers, toggles and blinkers
Practical bifurcation theory
Reaction-diffusion-advection
Stochastic modeling
Physical chemistry of aggregation/polymerization
Mechano-chemical dynamics
Sensitivity & robustness
Optimization, parameter estimation
Case Studies
calcium signaling
cancer modeling
cardiac modeling
signal transduction networks
gene expression
apoptosis
cell cycle regulation
cytoskeletal dynamics
neural models
intracellular trafficking & molecular motors
cell motility & chemotaxis
mechanics of mitosis & cell division
oscillations & bursting in neurosecretion
fertilization phenomena
development
mitochondrial function
cell differentiation
synthetic gene networks
circadian modeling
computational modeling in drug discovery
This
course is supported with funds provided by the National
Science Foundation