Eukaryotic Unicellular Organism Biology – Systems Biology of the Control of Cell Growth and Proliferation
Facts
Description
The overall objective of UNICELLSYS is a quantitative understanding of fundamental characteristics of eukaryotic unicellular organism biology: how cell growth and proliferation are controlled and coordinated by extracellular and intrinsic stimuli. Achieving an understanding of the principles according to which bio-molecular systems function requires integrating quantitative experimentation with simulations of dynamic mathematical models. UNICELLSYS brings together a consortium of leading European experimental and computational systems biologists that will study cell growth and proliferation at the levels of cell population, single cell, cellular network, large-scale dynamic systems and functional module. Building computational reconstructions and dynamic models will involve different precise quantitative measurements as well as complementary approaches of mathematical modelling. A major challenge will be the generation of comprehensive dynamic models of the entire control system of cell growth and proliferation, which will require integration of smaller sub-models and reduction of complexity. Implementation of the models will allow observing responses to altered growth conditions zooming in seamlessly from populations consisting of cells of different cell cycle stage via genome-wide molecular networks, large dynamic systems to detailed functional modules. Employing computational simulations combined with experimentation will allow discovering new and emerging principles of bio-molecular organisation and analysing the control mechanisms of cell growth and proliferation. The project will deliver new knowledge on fundamental eukaryotic biology as well as tools for quantitative experimentation and modelling. Detailed plans for dissemination and exploitation will ensure that UNICELLSYS will have major impact on the development of Systems Biology in Europe ensuring a competitive advantage of Europe in dynamic quantitative modelling of bio-molecular processes.
Partners
- Cooperation partnerUniversityGreat Britain
Aberystwyth University
- Cooperation partnerSpain
Centre for Genomic Regulation
- Cooperation partnerUniversitySweden
Chalmers University of Technology
- Cooperation partnerNon-university research institutionSweden
Fraunhofer-Chalmers Research Center for Industrial Mathematics
- Cooperation partnerNon-university research institutionGermany
Max Planck Society for the Advancement of Science
- Cooperation partnerUniversityAustria
Medical University of Vienna
- Cooperation partnerUniversitySwitzerland
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich
- Cooperation partnerUniversityDenmark
Technical University of Denmark
- Cooperation partnerUniversityGreat Britain
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford
- Cooperation partnerUniversityGreat Britain
The University of Manchester
- Cooperation partnerUniversitySpain
Universidad Pompeu Fabra
- Cooperation partnerUniversityGreat Britain
University of Cambridge
- Cooperation partnerUniversityGreat Britain
University of Edinburgh
- Cooperation partnerUniversitySweden
University of Gothenburg - G?teborgs universitet
- Cooperation partnerUniversityItaly
University of Milano-Bicocca
- Cooperation partnerNetherlands
Vereniging voor Christelijk Hoger Onderwijs Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek en Patientenzorg
- Cooperation partnerUniversityNetherlands
Vrije University Amsterdam