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People in the News

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

People in the News

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

‘Amazing’ math predicts how living cells behave

"Just as it is amazing that we have equations for the orbits of planets around stars, I think it's amazing that we are beginning to be able to write equations that predict the complex behaviors of a living cell," says Rob Phillips. (Photo Credit: Carlos de Paz/Flickr)
“Just as it is amazing that we have equations for the orbits of planets around stars, I think it’s amazing that we are beginning to be able to write equations that predict the complex behaviors of a living cell,” says Rob Phillips. (Photo Credit: Carlos de Paz/Flickr)

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In biology, scientists typically conduct experiments first and then develop mathematical or computer models afterward to show how the collected data fit with theory.

In his work, biophysicist Rob Phillips flips that practice on its head. He tackles questions in cellular biology as a physicist would—by first formulating a model that can make predictions and then testing those predictions.

Using this strategy, Phillips and his group have recently developed a mathematical model that accounts for the way genes compete with each other for the proteins that regulate their expression.

A paper describing the work appears in the current issue of the journal Cell.

“The thing that makes this study really interesting is that we did our calculations before we ever did any experiments,” says Phillips, a professor of biophysics and biology at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and the study’s principal investigator. “Just as it is amazing that we have equations for the orbits of planets around stars, I think it’s amazing that we are beginning to be able to write equations that predict the complex behaviors of a living cell.

 

Why Competition Matters

A number of research teams are interested in modeling gene expression—accurately describing all the processes involved in going from a gene to the protein or other product encoded by that DNA.