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Picking the right metaphors for addressing microbial systems: economic theory helps understanding biological complexity

    1. [1] Imperial College London

      Imperial College London

      Reino Unido

    2. [2] Universidade de São Paulo

      Universidade de São Paulo

      Brasil

    3. [3] Centro Nacional de Biotecnología-CSIC
  • Localización: International microbiology: official journal of the Spanish Society for Microbiology, ISSN 1139-6709, Vol. 24, Nº. 4, 2021, págs. 507-519
  • Idioma: inglés
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  • Resumen
    • Any descriptive language is necessarily metaphoric and interpretative. Two somewhat overlapping—but not identical—languages have been thoroughly employed in the last decade to address the issue of regulatory complexity in biological systems: the terminology of network theory and the jargon of electric circuitry. These approaches have found many formal equivalences between the layout of extant genetic circuits and the architecture of man-made counterparts. However, these languages still fail to describe accurately key features of biological objects, in particular the diversity of signal-transfer molecules and the diffusion that is inherent to any biochemical system. Furthermore, current formalisms associated with networks and circuits can hardly face the problem of multi-scale regulatory complexity—from single molecules to entire ecosystems. We argue that the language of economic theory might be instrumental not only to portray accurately many features of regulatory networks, but also to unveil aspects of the biological complexity problem that remain opaque to other types of analyses. The main perspective opened by the economic metaphor when applied to control of microbiological activities is a focus on metabolism, not gene selfishness, as the necessary background to make sense of regulatory phenomena. As an example, we analyse and reinterpret the widespread phenomenon of catabolite repression with the formal frame of the consumer’s choice theory.


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