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Publication : How many phenotypes from one genotype? The case of Prion diseases.

First Author  Kacser H Year  1996
Journal  J Theor Biol Volume  182
Issue  3 Pages  209-18
PubMed ID  8944151 Mgi Jnum  J:36706
Mgi Id  MGI:84132 Doi  10.1006/jtbi.1996.0157
Citation  Kacser H, et al. (1996) How many phenotypes from one genotype? The case of Prion diseases. J Theor Biol 182(3):209-18
abstractText  The usual assumption, namely that the underlying biochemical reactions in an organism tend to a unique steady-state, is shown to be not always correct. There are certain pathway mechanisms (e.g. positive feedback) which allow the system to exists in two alternative stable steady states. This bistability implies that environmental perturbations can switch the system from either state to the other. Such a switch takes place at the metabolic level and hence a single genotype can display two different, alternative, phenotypes without involving any changes in gene expression. The infective transmission of Scrapie-type diseases is explained here by such a mechanism involving protein-only changes.
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