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Published December 22, 2009 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

A feeling for the numbers in biology

Abstract

Although the quantitative description of biological systems has been going on for centuries, recent advances in the measurement of phenomena ranging from metabolism to gene expression to signal transduction have resulted in a new emphasis on biological numeracy. This article describes the confluence of two different approaches to biological numbers. First, an impressive array of quantitative measurements make it possible to develop intuition about biological numbers ranging from how many gigatons of atmospheric carbon are fixed every year in the process of photosynthesis to the number of membrane transporters needed to provide sugars to rapidly dividing Escherichia coli cells. As a result of the vast array of such quantitative data, the BioNumbers web site has recently been developed as a repository for biology by the numbers. Second, a complementary and powerful tradition of numerical estimates familiar from the physical sciences and canonized in the so-called "Fermi problems" calls for efforts to estimate key biological quantities on the basis of a few foundational facts and simple ideas from physics and chemistry. In this article, we describe these two approaches and illustrate their synergism in several particularly appealing case studies. These case studies reveal the impact that an emphasis on numbers can have on important biological questions.

Additional Information

© 2009 by the National Academy of Sciences. Received for review July 14, 2009. Published online before print December 14, 2009. We thank Niv Antonovsky, Danny Ben-Zvi, Maja Bialecka, Lacra Bintu, Jed Buchwald, David Cahen, Trek Changeux, Sidney Cox, Yuval Eshed, Nir Friedman, Hernan Garcia, Bill Gelbart, Peter Goldreich, Shura Grosberg, Adrian Jinich, Stephanie Johnson, Paul Jorgensen, Jane Kondev, Avi Levy, Sanjoy Mahan, Debbie Marks, Simon Mawer, Elliot Meyerowitz, Uri Moran, Elad Noor, Steve Quake, Chris Sander, Dave Savage, Moselio Schaechter, Eran Segal, Richard Sever, Guy Shinar, Mike Springer, Tim Skype, Wilfred (Zeev) Stein, Bodo Stern, Arbel Tadmor, Julie Theriot, Jon Widom, and Mike Widom for insights on biological numeracy and comments on the manuscript. This work is supported by a National Institutes of Health Director's Pioneer Award (to R.P.) and a grant from the Israel Science Foundation (to R.M.). R.M. is incumbent of the Anna and Maurice Boukstein career development chair. Author contributions: R.P. and R.M. designed research, performed research, analyzed data, and wrote the paper.

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Published - Phillips2009p6684P_Natl_Acad_Sci_Usa.pdf

Supplemental Material - 0907732106SI.pdf

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