For a general intoduction to Systems Biology, please read: Systems Biology: the 21st Century Science
The 20th century witnessed remarkable advances in knowledge
about the properties of matter (physics, chemistry and engineering)
and the digitalization of information (computer science). As
a result, we can fly to Paris, talk on our cell phones, and surf
the internet. However, many of us still get diabetes, cancer and
neurodegenerative diseases because contemporary medicine has yet to
develop an effective set of strategies for predicting and
preventing their occurrence. This is true because of the precise
etiologies of these complex diseases, and the reasons why some
people have increased susceptibility to them, are not particularly
well understood. But there is hope!
The 21st century began with the complete sequencing of the Human Genome, an achievement that provides the foundation for
revolutionary leaps in biology, (the science of living systems).
Biologists can now “read” the source code of any
species whose DNA they can isolate. Delineation of a species’
genes is the starting point for systems biology. The genes, and
the proteins they encode, constitute a “parts list” for
any said species. Once the parts are in hand, a focused, yet
global, investigation of how their molecular interactions engender
the distinctive properties of the species becomes more tractable
and more exciting. Whether it be with yeast, fruitfly or mouse,
large-scale experiments that could only be imagined a few decades
ago can now be performed routinely because now we know the genomic
sequence.
There has been a vast increase since year 2000 in the
number of publications, news articles, web pages, journals, and
academic organizations devoted to systems biology. Clearly,
this integrative approach has captured the imagination of
biologists and the wider scientific culture. But is it real
and will it work? Some naysayers charge that systems biology is
nothing more than a fashion fad that will pass once the hype dies
down. Others maintain that systems biology is, in essence, a
repackaging of established concepts and methodologies under a new
description. And a third camp endorses the idea of systems biology
as an enticing and powerful new discipline but thinks that
it’s premature. They argue that the required
knowledge base, datasets and methodologies aren’t
“there” yet.
Leading systems biology organizations such as the ISB intend to
prove the skeptics wrong by providing the concepts, methods, and
paradigmatic “proof of principle” demonstrations that
are necessary for establishing systems biology as a firm scientific
discipline. But what is it exactly? At present, there is no
universally accepted all-encompassing definition of systems
biology, even among scientists at the ISB.
However, there is a set of premises that characterize the approach.
Methodologies for performing systems biology
research are being developed and becoming more standardized.
Nonetheless, the field still faces significant experimental,
technical, computational and sociological challenges that
will need to be addressed over the next several years. As
these challenges are met, the promise of systems biology
research will be realized to the extent that practical applications
with real-world impact become available.
At the ISB, we are convinced that the systems biologists’
understanding of the interplays of different hierarchies of
biological information DNA, RNA, proteins, macromolecular
complexes, signaling networks, cells, organs, organisms, species
within their environmental contexts will promote conceptual
insights and practical innovations that will profoundly transform
peoples’ daily lives. Predictive, preventive, personalized and participatory medicine will be the most obvious impact. But
other transformations will occur. For example, in the development
of alternative sources of food and energy. Likewise, a much
deeper understanding of the biological basis of human behavior may,
in the future, lead to efforts to predict and control it. The
ethical, social, legal and political implications of systems
biology and its applications, are significant and ought
not be ignored or underappreciated by the research community.
With the new high throughput tools emerging—both technical
and computational—we maintain that the real revolution in
21st century biology and medicine will be its
digitalization. Digitalization means a number of
different things:
- Bookkeeping of biology and medicine will necessarily be digitalized.
- Tools will permit the relevant information to be extracted from single molecules and indeed the
information content from single cells.
For example, we can envision the time when an entire genome sequence can be determined
from a single cell. Computational methods will allow all of
the genes in this sequence to be identified. The corresponding
translated proteins will be folded into their three dimensional
structures (greatly facilitating the annotation of the genes as
three-dimensional structures as more highly conserved than digital
linear structures). The interactions of these proteins with one
another and other small and large molecules will be determined to
generate the potential protein networks and gene regulatory
networks. Thus, in this sense, the logic of life for the
corresponding organism will be revealed
computationally—although the interplay of environmental
information with the digital genome information will still require
experimentation.
The important point is that digital, as opposed to analog information, is much easier to assess, analyze and manipulate. The digital world of biology and medicine will transcend even the digitalization leading to modern information technology.
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