Team:Edinburgh/HP/robustness
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<p>In terms of bacterial system robustness Wittebolle and colleagues (2009) discussed a principle they called “insurance hypothesis”. This means that (1) there should be functional redundancy and (2) the need for relative abundances among those redundant species. Redundancy is the taking over of a population with redundant function (ie the same function) after disturbance of the original population. In other words, there are multiple strains able to perform a particular function and are therefore in the same functional group. They showed that for a population to respond adequately to stress, there has to be an even distribution of those redundant members in functional groups. Considering that populations in bioreactors for example are often exposed to perturbances, the bacteria need to have mechanisms in place to counteract these. If the populations are diverse enough, there is a high chance for “backup strains” with parallel pathways, which makes the system more robust.</p> | <p>In terms of bacterial system robustness Wittebolle and colleagues (2009) discussed a principle they called “insurance hypothesis”. This means that (1) there should be functional redundancy and (2) the need for relative abundances among those redundant species. Redundancy is the taking over of a population with redundant function (ie the same function) after disturbance of the original population. In other words, there are multiple strains able to perform a particular function and are therefore in the same functional group. They showed that for a population to respond adequately to stress, there has to be an even distribution of those redundant members in functional groups. Considering that populations in bioreactors for example are often exposed to perturbances, the bacteria need to have mechanisms in place to counteract these. If the populations are diverse enough, there is a high chance for “backup strains” with parallel pathways, which makes the system more robust.</p> | ||
- | <p>We therefore should think about specifically introducing redundancy into our system. That way, if one strain fails, another one could pick up its task. | + | <p>We therefore should think about specifically introducing redundancy into our system. That way, if one strain fails, another one could pick up its task. However, as we have discussed previously, we still want to achieve a high degree of specialisation as well. It therefore looks like realistically seen, we need to find a trade-off between strain specialisation and functional redundancy to make the system as robust as possible without severely impairing the population's output efficiency.</p> |
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Revision as of 20:26, 17 October 2014
RobustnessThere is no such thing as a perfectly robust system. In an electronic system, a single light might go out, and the whole system stops; in a biological system, a single organism may die off and disrupt the work; in a social system, an individual may decide to run off to live with the penguins in Antarctica and leave a gap in their society. We are interested in finding the most efficient ways of dealing with such occurrences. Therefore, we asked the teams how they would deal with any absences or issues.
Relevance for bacterial system designIn terms of bacterial system robustness Wittebolle and colleagues (2009) discussed a principle they called “insurance hypothesis”. This means that (1) there should be functional redundancy and (2) the need for relative abundances among those redundant species. Redundancy is the taking over of a population with redundant function (ie the same function) after disturbance of the original population. In other words, there are multiple strains able to perform a particular function and are therefore in the same functional group. They showed that for a population to respond adequately to stress, there has to be an even distribution of those redundant members in functional groups. Considering that populations in bioreactors for example are often exposed to perturbances, the bacteria need to have mechanisms in place to counteract these. If the populations are diverse enough, there is a high chance for “backup strains” with parallel pathways, which makes the system more robust. We therefore should think about specifically introducing redundancy into our system. That way, if one strain fails, another one could pick up its task. However, as we have discussed previously, we still want to achieve a high degree of specialisation as well. It therefore looks like realistically seen, we need to find a trade-off between strain specialisation and functional redundancy to make the system as robust as possible without severely impairing the population's output efficiency. Wittebolle et al (2009). Initial community evenness favours functionality under selective stress. Nature 458: 623-626. |