Title: Introduction to mathematicaltheoretical biology
1Introduction to mathematical/theoretical biology
- Lutz Brusch
- Andreas Deutsch
- Anja Voss-Böhme
2(No Transcript)
3Overview
- Goals
- Definition what is mathematical/theoretical
biology? - Modeling
- History
- Applications
- Overview of lecture
4Goals learn how...
- to read mathematical modeling papers
- to analyze mathematical models
- to critically judge the assumptions and the
contributions of mathematical models whenever
you encounter them in your research - to develop a mathematical model, i.e. to choose
an appropriate mathematical structure
5What is mathematical biology?
- Mathematical biology/biomathematics/ theoretical
biology is an interdisciplinary field of academic
study which models natural, biological processes
using mathematical techniques. It has both
practical and theoretical applications in
biological research. - The strength of biomathematics lies in the
quantification of specific values but also in
the identification of common structures and
patterns at different levels of biological
organisation.
6A first mathematical model rabbit population
growth
- The original problem that Fibonacci investigated
(in the year 1202) was about how fast rabbits
could breed in ideal circumstances. - Suppose a newly-born pair of rabbits, one male,
one female, are put in a field. Rabbits are able
to mate at the age of one month so that at the
end of its second month a female can produce
another pair of rabbits. Suppose that our rabbits
never die and that the female always produces one
new pair (one male, one female) every month from
the second month on. The puzzle that Fibonacci
posed was... - How many pairs will there be in one year?
7Solution
- At the end of the first month, they mate, but
there is still one only 1 pair. - At the end of the second month the female
produces a new pair, so now there are 2 pairs of
rabbits in the field. - At the end of the third month, the original
female produces a second pair, making 3 pairs in
all in the field. - At the end of the fourth month, the original
female has produced yet another new pair, the
female born two months ago produces her first
pair also, making 5 pairs.
The number of pairs of rabbits in the field at
the start of each month is 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13,
21, 34, ...
an1an an-1, with a1a2 1
Fibonacci numbers
8Why is this interesting?
Fibonacci numbers appear e.g. in phyllotactic
patterns
9(No Transcript)
10Mathematical analysis
- a proof is a demonstration that, given certain
axioms, some statement of interest is necessarily
true. Proofs employ logic but usually include
some amount of natural language. Some common
proof techniques are - Direct proof where the conclusion is established
by logically combining the axioms, definitions
and earlier theorems - Proof by induction where a base case is proved,
and an induction rule used to prove an (often
infinite) series of other cases - Proof by contradiction (also known as reductio ad
absurdum) where it is shown that if some
property were true, a logical contradiction
occurs, hence the property must be false. - Proof by construction constructing a concrete
example with a property to show that something
having that property exists. - Proof by exhaustion where the conclusion is
established by dividing it into a finite number
of cases and proving each one separately - Example Proof that sqrt(2) is irrational
11Simulations Game of life
The rules1. Survival, if living cell has 2 or
3 neighbours,2. Death, if living cell has less
than 2 or more than 3 neighbours , 3. Birth, if
dead cell has precisely 3 living neighbours.
Configuration
12I. What are mathematical models good for?
- Quantitative predictions(based on functional
relationship) - Stability analysis, asymptotic behavior,...
- Understanding of stochastic/deterministic effects
13II. What are mathematical models good for?
- Mathematical models can help to explain
cooperative behavior
14The roots...1. Biology
- Biology term was introduced by Jean Baptiste de
Lamarck (1744-1825) and Gottfried Reinhold
Treviranus (see e.g. Biology, or philosophy of
vital nature, G. R. Treviranus, 1802), - Cell the word cell was introduced in the 17th
century by the English scientist Robert Hooke, it
was not until 1839 that two Germans, Matthias
Schleiden and Theodor Schwann, proved that the
cell is the common structural unit of living
things. The cell concept provided impetus for
progress in embryology, founded by the Estonian
scientist Karl Ernst von Baer
15Status of biology end of 19th century
- huge amounts of data (from expeditions into
colonies and new observations (due to new
physical and chemical techniques) - disciplines widely separated (zoology, botany,
...). Physiology (part of medical research) was
trendy and cell biology had emerged as a central
discipline (Max Verworn (1901) ...if physiology
wants to explain the elementary and general
processes of life, it can do so only as cellular
physiology...)
16Roots...2. Theoretical biology
- A plant biologist (Johannes Reinke) introduced
the concept/notion of theoretical biologyA
theoretical biology has so far merely not yet
been considered, at least not as a connected
discipline (Reinke, 1901)...The task of a
theoretical biology would be not only to find out
the origins of biological events, but also to
check the basic assumptions of our biological
thinking
17Roots 3. Further roots
- Ludwig v. Bertalanffy Introduction to
theoretical biology I and II, 1932, 1942 - Early environmentalist Jakob v. Uexküll
(1864-1944) Theoretische Biologie (1920),
Umwelt-Innenwelt-Außenwelt - Physicist Nicolas Rashevsky Bulletin of
mathematical biophysics (1934) (today Bulletin
of Mathematical Biology, 1973) - Scientific foundation in Leiden 1935 Acta
Biotheoretica
18Journals
- Biometry Biometrika (1901), Biometrics Bulletin
(1945), Biometrical Journal (1959) - Acta Biotheoretica (1935)
- Cybernetics Cybernetica (1958),...
- Journal of Theoretical Biology (1961)
- Mathematical Biosciences (1967)
- Theoretical Population Biology (1970)
- BioSystems (1972)
19Journals cont.
- Bulletin of Math. Biophys. (1939)?Bull. Math.
Biol. (1973) - Journal of Mathematical Biology (1974)
- Mathematical Medicine and Biology (1984)
- Comments on Theor. Biol. (1989)
- Journal of Biological Systems (1993)
- Theorie in den Biowissenschaften (1996)
20Roots ...4. Population genetics
- The famous experiments of Mendel, and the
fruitful communication between experimental
biologists and applied mathematicians in the
1930s, marked the beginnings of population
genetics and were seminal for biomathematics. As
early as 1896, the British professor K. Person
applied the now standard statistical techniques
of probability curves and regression lines to
genetic data. This was seemingly the first proof
of the existence of a mathematical law for
biological events (1900). See also model examples
later this lecture HARDY-WEINBERG LAW,
FUNDAMENTAL THEOREM ON NATURAL SELECTION - William Bateson introduced the notion genetics
for research on Mendelian heredity of characters
(Cambridge, 1905) - William Johannsen introduced the notion gene
as something in the gametes, by which the
properties of the developing organism is or can
be conditioned or co-determined (Copenhagen,
1909)
21Roots 5. What is life?
- Oscar Hertwig (1900) Life is based on a peculiar
organisation of material with which are connected
again peculiar processes and functions, how they
never can be found in non-living nature,...,with
each of the infinite steps and forms of
organisation there are produced new kinds of
effects (Wirkungsweisen). - Remark early formulation of nowadays favored
definition of life as a complicated adaptive,
regulatory, dynamical system based on
physico-chemical mechanisms. - E. Schrödinger What is life? (Dublin 1944)
22Earth
Electron
-12
-6
-9
-3
0
3
6
Human
23New disciplines
- Biology (ca. 1800)
- Theoretical biology (ca. 1900)
- Cybernetics (N. Wiener, 1948) relations between
machines and living nature - Bioinformatics (ca. 1970) information-technical
techniques to store, analyze and display the
information contents of biological systems, ... - System biology (H. Kitano, 2001)
interdisciplinary approach focusing on a
wholistic understanding of complex living systems
based on an integration of biological data
24Mathematical problems in biology examples
- Ecology/ethology optimization of food search
- Evolution evolutionary stable strategies,
reconstruction of phylogenetic trees - Development embryological pattern formation
- Epidemiology spread of infectious diseases
- Molecular genetics coding and sequence alignment
- Neurology contrast enhancement in neural
networks - Physiology regulation of glucose level in the
blood - Biotechnology fermenter control
- .....
25In this lecture focus on ...
- How is the variety of biological forms, shapes
and organisms created (development/genetics/evol
ution)? - How are organismic activities maintained
(physiology)?
26Overview lecture
- Introduction/history
- Model examples
- Difference and differential equations
- Partial differential equations
- Stochastic processes
- Cellular automata
27References
28Model examples1. population growth