Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Epigenetics" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Potential epigenetic mechanisms in psychotherapy: a pilot study on DNA methylation and mentalization change in borderline personality disorder Quevedo Y; Booij L; Herrera L; Hernández C; Jiménez JP; 36171872
PSYCHOLOGY
2 DNA methylation as a mediator in the association between prenatal maternal stress and child mental health outcomes: Current state of knowledge Azar N; Booij L; 36113690
PSYCHOLOGY
3 DNA methylation in people with Anorexia Nervosa: Epigenome-wide patterns in actively ill, long-term remitted, and healthy-eater women Steiger H; Booij L; Thaler L; St-Hilaire A; Israël M; Casey KF; Oliverio S; Crescenzi O; Lee V; Turecki G; Joober R; Szyf M; Breton É; 35703085
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Dissecting cell fate dynamics in pediatric glioblastoma through the lens of complex systems and cellular cybernetics Abicumaran Uthamacumaran 35678918
PHYSICS
5 Immunoinflammatory processes: Overlapping mechanisms between obesity and eating disorders? Breton E; Fotso Soh J; Booij L; 35594735
PSYCHOLOGY
6 DNA methylation differences in stress-related genes, functional connectivity and gray matter volume in depressed and healthy adolescents. Chiarella J, Schumann L, Pomares FB, Frodl T, Tozzi L, Nemoda Z, Yu P, Szyf M, Khalid-Khan S, Booij L 32479312
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Eating Disorders, Heredity and Environmental Activation: Getting Epigenetic Concepts into Practice. Steiger H, Booij L 32375223
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Methylation of the OXTR gene in women with anorexia nervosa: Relationship to social behavior. Thaler L, Brassard S, Booij L, Kahan E, McGregor K, Labbe A, Israel M, Steiger H 31823473
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Birth weight discordance, DNA methylation, and cortical morphology of adolescent monozygotic twins. Casey KF, Levesque ML, Szyf M, Ismaylova E, Verner MP, Suderman M, Vitaro F, Brendgen M, Dionne G, Boivin M, Tremblay RE, Booij L 28032437
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Dissecting cell fate dynamics in pediatric glioblastoma through the lens of complex systems and cellular cybernetics
Authors:Abicumaran Uthamacumaran
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35678918/
DOI:10.1007/s00422-022-00935-8
Publication:Biological cybernetics
Keywords:Artificial intelligenceAttractorsCancerCellular decision-makingComplex systemsComputational medicineCyberneticsEpigeneticsNetworksSystems oncology
PMID:35678918 Category: Date Added:2022-06-09
Dept Affiliation: PHYSICS
1 Department of Physics (Alumni), Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada. a_utham@live.concordia.ca.

Description:

Cancers are complex dynamic ecosystems. Reductionist approaches to science are inadequate in characterizing their self-organized patterns and collective emergent behaviors. Since current approaches to single-cell analysis in cancer systems rely primarily on single time-point multiomics, many of the temporal features and causal adaptive behaviors in cancer dynamics are vastly ignored. As such, tools and concepts from the interdisciplinary paradigm of complex systems theory are introduced herein to decode the cellular cybernetics of cancer differentiation dynamics and behavioral patterns. An intuition for the attractors and complex networks underlying cancer processes such as cell fate decision-making, multiscale pattern formation systems, and epigenetic state-transitions is developed. The applications of complex systems physics in paving targeted therapies and causal pattern discovery in precision oncology are discussed. Pediatric high-grade gliomas are discussed as a model-system to demonstrate that cancers are complex adaptive systems, in which the emergence and selection of heterogeneous cellular states and phenotypic plasticity are driven by complex multiscale network dynamics. In specific, pediatric glioblastoma (GBM) is used as a proof-of-concept model to illustrate the applications of the complex systems framework in understanding GBM cell fate decisions and decoding their adaptive cellular dynamics. The scope of these tools in forecasting cancer cell fate dynamics in the emerging field of computational oncology and patient-centered systems medicine is highlighted.





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