Cellular ``bauplans'': Evolving unicellular forms by means of Julia sets and Pickover biomorphs
Created by W.Langdon from
gp-bibliography.bib Revision:1.8051
- @Article{Mojica200919,
-
author = "Nelly Selem Mojica and Jorge Navarro and
Pedro C. Marijuan and Rafael Lahoz-Beltra",
-
title = "Cellular ``bauplans'': Evolving unicellular forms by
means of Julia sets and Pickover biomorphs",
-
journal = "Biosystems",
-
year = "2009",
-
volume = "98",
-
number = "1",
-
pages = "19--30",
-
month = oct,
-
keywords = "genetic algorithms, genetic programming, Cellular
bauplans, Pickover biomorphs, Morphogenetic field,
Julia set, Evolving fractal, Cytoskeletal mechanical
forces, Organismic form",
-
ISSN = "0303-2647",
-
DOI = "doi:10.1016/j.biosystems.2009.07.002",
-
broken = "http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6T2K-4WRD3P1-1/2/9d1dc224fa7f3b0696e38abe5aec4a63",
-
size = "12 pages",
-
abstract = "The universe of cellular forms has received scarce
attention by mainstream neo-Darwinian views. The
possibility that a fundamental trait of biological
order may consist upon, or be guided by, developmental
processes not completely amenable to natural selection
was more akin to previous epochs of biological thought,
i.e. the bauplan discussion. Thirty years ago, however,
Lynn and Tucker studied the biological mechanisms
responsible for defining organelles position inside
cells. The fact that differentiated structures
performing a specific function within the eukaryotic
cell (i.e. mitochondrion, vacuole, or chloroplast) were
occupying specific positions in the protoplasm was the
observational and experimental support of the
morphogenetic field notion at the cellular level. In
the present paper we study the morphogenetic field
evolution yielding from an initial population of
undifferentiated cells to diversified unicellular
organisms as well as specialised eukaryotic cell types.
The cells are represented as Julia sets and Pickover
biomorphs, simulating the effect of Darwinian natural
selection with a simple genetic algorithm. The
morphogenetic field defines the locations where cells
are differentiated or sub-cellular components (or
organelles) become organised. It may be realised by
different possibilities, one of them by diffusing
chemicals along the Turing model. We found that
Pickover cells show a higher diversity of size and form
than those populations evolved as Julia sets. Another
novelty is the way that cellular organelles and cell
nucleus fill in the cell, always in dependence on the
previous cell definition as Julia set or Pickover
biomorph. Our findings support the existence of
specific attractors representing the functional and
stable form of a differentiated cell--genuine cellular
bauplans. The configuration of the morphogenetic field
is attracted towards one or another attractor depending
on the environmental influences as modelled by a
particular fitness function. The model promotes the
classical discussions of D'Arcy Thompson and the more
recent views of Waddington, Goodwin and others that
consider organisms as dynamical systems that evolve
through a master plan of transformations, amenable to
natural selection. Intriguingly, the model also
connects with current developments on mechanobiology,
highlighting the informational-developmental role that
cytoskeletons may play.",
-
notes = "GA uses complex mathematical functions.
Department of Applied Mathematics, Faculty of
Biological Sciences, Complutense University of Madrid,
Madrid 28040, Spain",
- }
Genetic Programming entries for
Nelly Selem Mojica
Jorge Navarro
Pedro C Marijuan
Rafael Lahoz-Beltra
Citations