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Philosophical Basis and Some Historical Aspects of Systems Biology: From Hegel to Noble - Applications for Bioenergetic Research

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages 1161-1192

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms10031161

Keywords

Systems Biology; Molecular Systems Bioenergetics; cellular energy metabolism; regulation; compartmentation; energy transfer systems

Funding

  1. INSERM, France
  2. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR07-BLAN-0086-01]
  3. Estonian Science Foundation [Ndegrees7117, 6142]

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We live in times of paradigmatic changes for the biological sciences. Reductionism, that for the last six decades has been the philosophical basis of biochemistry and molecular biology, is being displaced by Systems Biology, which favors the study of integrated systems. Historically, Systems Biology - defined as the higher level analysis of complex biological systems - was pioneered by Claude Bernard in physiology, Norbert Wiener with the development of cybernetics, and Erwin Schrodinger in his thermodynamic approach to the living. Systems Biology applies methods inspired by cybernetics, network analysis, and non-equilibrium dynamics of open systems. These developments follow very precisely the dialectical principles of development from thesis to antithesis to synthesis discovered by Hegel. Systems Biology opens new perspectives for studies of the integrated processes of energy metabolism in different cells. These integrated systems acquire new, system-level properties due to interaction of cellular components, such as metabolic compartmentation, channeling and functional coupling mechanisms, which are central for regulation of the energy fluxes. State of the art of these studies in the new area of Molecular System Bioenergetics is analyzed.

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