Emergent phenomena in living systems: A statistical mechanical perspective

Bose, Indrani (2022) Emergent phenomena in living systems: A statistical mechanical perspective Journal of Biosciences, 47 (2). ISSN 0973-7138

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1007/s12038-021-00247-2

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12038-021-00247-2

Abstract

A natural phenomenon occurring in a living system is an outcome of the dynamics of the specific biological network underlying the phenomenon. The collective dynamics have both deterministic and stochastic components. The stochastic nature of the key processes like gene expression and cell differentiation give rise to fluctuations (noise) at the levels of the biomolecules, and this combined with nonlinear interactions gives rise to a number of emergent phenomena. In this review, we describe and discuss some of these phenomena which have the character of phase transitions in physical systems. We specifically focus on noise-induced transitions in a stochastic model of gene expression and in a population genetics model which have no analogs when the dynamics are solely deterministic in nature. Some of these transitions exhibit critical-point phenomena belonging to the mean-field Ising universality class of equilibrium phase transitions. A number of other examples, ranging from biofilms to homeostasis in adult tissues, are also discussed, which exhibit behaviour similar to critical phenomena in equilibrium and nonequilbrium phase transitions. The examples illustrate how the subject of statistical mechanics provides a bridge between theoretical models and experimental observations.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Springer-Verlag.
ID Code:135080
Deposited On:18 Jan 2023 11:09
Last Modified:18 Jan 2023 11:09

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