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V. Life's Corporeal Evolution Develops, Encodes and Organizes Itself: An EarthWinian Genesis SynthesisB. Systems Biology Unites: EvoDevo, Genomes, Cells, Networks, Symbiosis, Homology, Inherency Witzany, Gunther. Natural Genome Editing from a Biocommunicative Perspective. Biosemiotics. 4/3, 2011. As the Abstract below conveys, the prolific biophilosopher continues to advance this approach and school that moves beyond neoDarwinism to appreciate gene sequences in a way as an informative “language-like text.” Natural genome editing from a biocommunicative perspective is the competent agent-driven generation and integration of meaningful nucleotide sequences into pre-existing genomic content arrangements, and the ability to (re-)combine and (re-)regulate them according to context-dependent (i.e. adaptational) purposes of the host organism. Natural genome editing integrates both natural editing of genetic code and epigenetic marking that determines genetic reading patterns. As agents that edit genetic code and epigenetically mark genomic structures, viral and subviral agents have been suggested because they may be evolutionarily older than cellular life. Woese, Carl. A New Biology for a New Century. Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews. 68/2, 2004. The leading theorist of microbial taxonomy finds biological science to have reached in its course an epochal turning point and paradigm shift. The necessary 20th century approach of identifying the molecular, genetic and microbial components has fulfilled its task. But this results in an incomplete, mechanical view of nature. To move forward, a diametric integral vista is called for whereby life’s innate evolutionary emergence is expressed by the new sciences of self-organizing complexity. And it is just this revolution that Natural Genesis is trying to report and convey. Woese’s important paper is also noted in Part V, A Quickening Evolution, and Part VI, Microbial Colonies. The molecular cup is now empty. The time has come to replace the purely reductionist “eyes-down” molecular perspective with a new and genuinely holistic, “eyes-up,” view of the living world, one whose primary focus is on evolution, emergence, and biology’s innate complexity. (175) And it is becoming increasingly clear that to understand living systems in any deep sense, we must come to see them not materialistically, as machines, but as (stable) complex, dynamic organization. (176) Wolkenhauer, Olaf and Jan-Hendrik Hofmeyr. An Abstract Cell Model that Describes the Self-Organization of Cell Function in Living Systems. Journal of Theoretical Biology. 246/461, 2007. University of Rostock, Germany and University of Stellenbosch, South Africa mathematical system biologists explain the self-organizing coordination of cell function, as most distinguished by its bounded closure. The principal aim of systems biology is to search for general principles that govern living systems. We develop an abstract dynamic model of a cell, rooted in Mesarović and Takahara's general systems theory. In this conceptual framework the function of the cell is delineated by the dynamic processes it can realize. We abstract basic cellular processes, i.e., metabolism, signalling, gene expression, into a mapping and consider cell functions, i.e., cell differentiation, proliferation, etc. as processes that determine the basic cellular processes that realize a particular cell function. We then postulate the existence of a ‘coordination principle’ that determines cell function. These ideas are condensed into a theorem: If basic cellular processes for the control and regulation of cell functions are present, then the coordination of cell functions is realized autonomously from within the system. (461) Yu, Haiyuan and Mark Gerstein. Genomic Analysis of the Hierarchical Structure of Regulatory Networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 103/14724, 2006. Genome systems are found to employ a consistent network motif by which to achieve viable translation. This is said to be the same organization which is present in human societies. Another contribution to a natural genesis that recycles a common pattern and process from atom to cosmos. A fundamental question in biology is how the cell uses transcription factors (TFs) to coordinate the expression of thousands of genes in response to various stimuli. The relationship between TFs and their target genes can be modeled in terms of directed regulatory networks. These relationships, in turn, can be readily compared with commonplace “chain-of-command” structures in social networks, which have characteristic layouts. (14724) In general, our results show that there is a pyramid-shaped hierarchical structure in regulatory networks, which is well organized in a clearly nonrandom manner. The decision making scheme in this hierarchy is a cogitation-like multistep process. (14730)
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