Einladung zum Vortrag im Kolloquium
Technische Kybernetik
Parametric uncertainty analysis of
biochemical signal transduction models
Dipl.-Ing. Steffen Waldherr
Institut für Systemtheorie und
Regelungstechnik
Universität Stuttgart
Zeit:
Dienstag 21.07.2009
· 16:00 Uhr
Ort: Seminarraum IST 3.243 · Pfaffenwaldring
9· Campus Stuttgart -Vaihingen
Abstract
Dynamical models of biochemical
signal
transduction
pathways are often affected by large uncertainties on the parameter
values. Robustness analysis is an efficient tool to quantify the
effects of model uncertainty on qualitative properties of the model.
This talk addresses in particular the robustness analysis problem for
qualitative dynamical behaviour in the pathway, such as sustained
oscillations or bistability. The level of parametric uncertainty not
affecting the dynamical behaviour is thereby quantified by a suitably
defined robustness measure. In the robustness analysis of biochemical
networks, there are several challenges which obstruct the direct
application of control engineering methods to this problem. These
challenges include nonlinearity of the equations, dependence of the
steady state on uncertain parameters, and the need to consider a
nominally unstable system.
This talk presents a novel solution to the robustness analysis problem,
overcoming the mentioned challenges within a control engineering point
of view. To this end, parameter values yielding a change in the
dynamical behaviour are characterised via a feedback loop breaking
approach. Based on this approach, two methods are proposed: one to
compute robustness certificates, yielding a lower bound on the
robustness measure, and one to search for nearby bifurcations, yielding
an upper bound. To illustrate the proposed methods, an analysis of the
NF-kB pathway is presented. This pathway is a central player in the
mammalian immune system and of high biomedical relevance. The
uncertainty analysis yields novel biological insights into the
oscillatory behaviour of this pathway.
Biographical Information
Waldherr
is a research assistant at the Institute for Systems Theory and
Automatic Control, University of Stuttgart. He studied engineering
cybernetics at the University of Stuttgart, where he received the
diploma degree in 2005, and mathematics at the National Institute of
Applied Sciences in Rouen (France). His main research interests are the
dynamical modelling of biochemical networks and the application of
systems theory to biological processes.
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