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      Cell fates as high-dimensional attractor states of a complex gene regulatory network.

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          Abstract

          Cells in multicellular organisms switch between distinct cell fates, such as proliferation or differentiation into specialized cell types. Genome-wide gene regulatory networks govern this behavior. Theoretical studies of complex networks suggest that they can exhibit ordered (stable) dynamics, raising the possibility that cell fates may represent high-dimensional attractor states. We used gene expression profiling to show that trajectories of neutrophil differentiation converge to a common state from different directions of a 2773-dimensional gene expression state space, providing the first experimental evidence for a high-dimensional stable attractor that represents a distinct cellular phenotype.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Phys Rev Lett
          Physical review letters
          American Physical Society (APS)
          0031-9007
          0031-9007
          Apr 01 2005
          : 94
          : 12
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Vascular Biology Program, Departments of Pathology & Surgery, Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA. sui.huang@childrens.harvard.edu
          Article
          10.1103/PhysRevLett.94.128701
          15903968
          b7a2f44c-792b-4ce6-8c43-6c4b87d7743a
          History

          Non-NASA Center,NASA Discipline Cell Biology
          Non-NASA Center, NASA Discipline Cell Biology

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