Lecture Description
In this lecture, Prof. Jeff Gore finishes the discussion of the Lotka-Volterra competition model. He then moves on to the topic of non-transitive interactions, what he calls rock-paper-scissor interactions.
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Course Index
- Introduction to the class and overview of topics
- Input function, Michaelis-Menten kinetics, and cooperativity
- Autoregulation, feedback and bistability
- Synthetic biology and stability analysis in the toggle switch
- Oscillatory genetic networks
- Graph properties of transcription networks
- Feed-forward loop network motif
- Introduction to stochastic gene expression
- Causes and consequences of stochastic gene expression
- Stochastic modeling
- Life at low Reynold’s number
- Robustness and bacterial chemotaxis
- Robustness in development and pattern formation
- Microbial evolution experiments and optimal gene circuit design
- Evolution in finite populations
- Clonal interference and the distribution of beneficial mutations
- Fitness landscapes and sequence spaces
- Evolutionary games
- Survival in fluctuating environments
- Parasites, the evolution of virulence and sex
- Interspecies interactions
- Ecosystem stability, critical transitions, and biodiversity
- Dynamics of populations in space
- The neutral theory of ecology
Course Description
This course presented by Prof. Jeff Gore provides an introduction to cellular and population-level systems biology with an emphasis on synthetic biology, modeling of genetic networks, cell-cell interactions, and evolutionary dynamics. Cellular systems include genetic switches and oscillators, network motifs, genetic network evolution, and cellular decision-making. Population-level systems include models of pattern formation, cell-cell communication, and evolutionary systems biology.