Ubiquitous Asymptotic Robustness in Biochemical Systems
Hyukpyo Hong (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
| Thu Feb 26, 16:00-16:30 (10 days from now) | |
Abstract: Living systems maintain stable internal states despite environmental fluctuations. Absolute concentration robustness (ACR) is a striking homeostatic phenomenon in which the steady-state concentration of a species remains invariant despite changes in total supply. In this talk, we introduce a previously underappreciated phenomenon, namely asymptotic ACR (aACR): approximate robustness can emerge solely from the network structure, without requiring exact ACR motifs or negligible parameters. We find that aACR is more pervasive than classical ACR and prove that this ubiquity stems solely from network structure. This notion of aACR would provide a rigorous and practical tool to analyze robust responses in broad biochemical systems. This is joint work with Diego Rojas La Luz and Gheorge Craciun.
chemical biologychemical kineticsalgebraic geometrydynamical systemsprobability
Audience: researchers in the topic
Seminar on the Mathematics of Reaction Networks
Series comments: Subscription link: list.ku.dk/postorius/lists/morn.list.ku.dk/
This seminar series focuses on progress in mathematical theory for the study of reaction networks, mainly in biology and chemistry. The scope is broad and accommodates works arising from dynamical systems, stochastics, algebra, topology and beyond.
We aim at providing a common forum for sharing knowledge and encouraging discussion across subfields. In particular we aim at facilitating interactions between junior and established researchers. These considerations will be represented in the choice of invited speakers and we will strive to create an excellent, exciting and diverse schedule.
The seminar runs twice a month, typically on the 2nd and 4th Thursday of the month, at 17:00 Brussels time (observe that this webpage shows the schedule in your current time zone). Each session consists of two 25-minute talks followed by 5-minute questions. After the two talks, longer discussions will take place for those interested. To this end, we will use breakout rooms. For this to work well, you need to have the latest version of Zoom installed (version 5.3.0 or higher), and use the desktop client or mobile app (not supported on ChromeOS).
We look forward hearing about new work and meeting many of you over zoom! Many of the talks are recorded; to see the recording, from Past Talks, open details of the listed talk for a video link.
The organizers.
| Organizers: | Daniele Cappelletti*, Stefan Müller*, Tung Nguyen*, Polly Yu* |
| *contact for this listing |
