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Presented by Michael Mackey, McGill University
Abstract
Simple bacterial gene regulatory motifs can be viewed from the perspective of dynamical systems theory, and mathematical models of these have existed almost since the statement of the operon concept. In this talk I will review the three basic types of these regulatory mechanisms and the underlying dynamical systems concepts that apply in each case. In the latter part of the talk I will discuss the exciting mathematical challenges that arise when trying to make honest models of the underlying biology. These include transcriptional and translational delays, and the fact that these delays may be state dependent, as well as the interesting and often unsolved problems of characterizing the noise inherent in bacterial dynamics (which is not of the usual type).