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Cell fate through the lens of random dynamical systems

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AdrianaZanca

The University of Melbourne
"Cell fate through the lens of random dynamical systems"
How pluripotent cells give rise to progressively more specialised cells over multiple cell divisions, known as cell fate, remains one of the mysteries of systems biology. During development, it is of the utmost importance that cells uphold certain division regimes for an organism to survive and thrive. Beyond development, cell fate perturbations can result in cancer and other pathological conditions. The theoretical and mathematical biology community has been making contributions to our understanding of cell fate including by quantifying Waddington’s seminal landscape using dynamical systems, performing statistical trajectory inference on single-cell sequencing data, or considering geometric and algebraic approaches to cell fate. In this talk, I will present a random dynamical systems interpretation of cell fate. This approach is, arguably, a generalisation of existing models of cell fate that may be able to provide new perspectives into cell fate.
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Annual Meeting for the Society for Mathematical Biology, 2025.