Use el DOI o este identificador para enlazar este recurso: http://ru.facmed.unam.mx/jspui/handle/FACMED_UNAM/A84
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dc.contributor.authorHans Westerhoff
dc.contributor.authorBrooks, Aaron
dc.contributor.authorVangelis Simeonidis
dc.contributor.authorGarcia Contreras, Rodolfo
dc.contributor.authorFei He
dc.contributor.authorFred Boogerd
dc.contributor.authorJackson, Victoria
dc.contributor.authorGoncharuk, Valeri
dc.contributor.authorKolodkin, Alexey
dc.coverage.spatialCH
dc.date.accessioned2019-06-17T17:23:46Z-
dc.date.available2019-06-17T17:23:46Z-
dc.date.issued2014
dc.identifier.urihttp://ru.facmed.unam.mx/jspui/handle/FACMED_UNAM/A84-
dc.description.abstractLiving organisms persist by virtue of complex interactions among many components organized into dynamic, environment-responsive networks that span multiple scales and dimensions. Biological networks constitute a type of information and communication technology (ICT): they receive information from the outside and inside of cells, integrate and interpret this information, and then activate a response. Biological networks enable molecules within cells, and even cells themselves, to communicate with each other and their environment. We have become accustomed to associating brain activity - particularly activity of the human brain - with a phenomenon we call "intelligence." Yet, four billion years of evolution could have selected networks with topologies and dynamics that confer traits analogous to this intelligence, even though they were outside the intercellular networks of the brain. Here, we explore how macromolecular networks in microbes confer intelligent characteristics, such as memory, anticipation, adaptation and reflection and we review current understanding of how network organization reflects the type of intelligence required for the environments in which they were selected. We propose that, if we were to leave terms such as "human" and "brain" out of the defining features of "intelligence," all forms of life - from microbes to humans - exhibit some or all characteristics consistent with "intelligence." We then review advances in genome-wide data production and analysis, especially in microbes, that provide a lens into microbial intelligence and propose how the insights derived from quantitatively characterizing biomolecular networks may enable synthetic biologists to create intelligent molecular networks for biotechnology, possibly generating new forms of intelligence, first in silico and then in vivo.
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherFrontiers Media S.A.
dc.rightsopenAccess
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
dc.subjectMicrobiología
dc.subjectInteligencia microbiana
dc.subjectAdaptación
dc.subject.classificationBiología y Química
dc.subject.otherMicrobiology
dc.subject.otherMicrobial intelligence
dc.subject.otherAdaptation
dc.titleMacromolecular networks and intelligence in microorganisms.
dc.typeArtículo
dc.typepublishedVersion
dcterms.bibliographicCitationFrontiers in Microbiology (1664-302X) vol. 5, 1-17 (2014)
dcterms.creatorHans Westerhoff::orcid::0000-0002-0443-6114
dcterms.creatorBrooks, Aaron::orcid::0000-0002-5309-7307
dcterms.creatorVangelis Simeonidis::orcid::0000-0001-6153-4493
dcterms.creatorGarcia Contreras, Rodolfo::cvu::40169
dcterms.creatorFei He::orcid::0000-0001-9176-6674
dcterms.creatorFred Boogerd::orcid::0000-0002-3329-7459
dcterms.creatorJackson, Victoria::ca::1239391
dcterms.creatorGoncharuk, Valeri::ca::1239390
dcterms.creatorKolodkin, Alexey::ca::1239259
dc.identifier.doi10.3389/fmicb.2014.00379
dc.relation.ispartofjournalhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/issues/232446/
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