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What is Second-Messenger

Handbook of Research on Computational and Systems Biology: Interdisciplinary Applications
A molecule that transduces signals from receptors on the cell surface to other intra-cellular molecules. Typically, second-messengers can amplify signals, thus acting analogous to a gain function in electronic circuits. Proximity to the receptors typically implies that these signals are activated early in signal transduction and are thus likely to influence the behavior of other intra-cellular molecules that are subsequently activated.
Published in Chapter:
Unsupervised Methods to Identify Cellular Signaling Networks from Perturbation Data
Madhusudan Natarajan (Pfizer, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60960-491-2.ch015
Abstract
The inference of cellular architectures from detailed time-series measurements of intracellular variables is an active area of research. High throughput measurements of responses to cellular perturbations are usually analyzed using a variety of machine learning methods that typically only work within one type of measurement. Here, summaries of some recent research attempts are presented–these studies have expanded the scope of the problem by systematically integrating measurements across multiple layers of regulation including second messengers, protein phosphorylation markers, transcript levels, and functional phenotypes into signaling vectors or signatures of signal transduction. Data analyses through simple unsupervised methods provide rich insight into the biology of the underlying network, and in some cases reconstruction of key architectures of the underlying network from perturbation data. The methodological advantages provided by these efforts are examined using data from a publicly available database of responses to systematic perturbations of cellular signaling networks generated by the Alliance for Cellular Signaling (AfCS).
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