
Phillip Manno
Bio [2005]
Phillip Manno is a medical oncologist/hematologist with the Nevada
Cancer Institute in Nevada. "My clinical interests include lung and
head & neck cancer. My NKS interests are motivated towards its
application to fields of cellular signal transduction and
carcinogenesis."
Project Title
Carcinogenesis in Substitution Systems
Project

In carcinogenesis, we know that normal tissue follows growth patterns
that are balanced by organized interactive patterns between cells
ultimately leading to apoptosis (programmed cell death). Growth is
considered exponential. When a clonal perturbation occurs in a normal
cell, a cluster of sequential mutations over time can lead to genomic
instability and the development of a malignant phenotype with growth
autonomy and evasion of apoptosis. The accumulation of this monoclonal
population leads to the invasive destruction of neighboring cells. I
would submit that as simple rules lead to complexity in a
computational universe, the same may be true for patterns of cancer in
nature.
We know that a feature described in simple 1D substitution systems is
that the number of elements can change when some elements are replaced
by a block of new elements. This is in contrast to cellular automata,
mobile automata, or Turing machines, in which the number and
organization of cells remain the same. Intuitively, this may provide a
useful methodology for our search. We will therefore look at the
behavior of sequential substitution systems with rules dependent on
the cell itself and its neighbors as this may yield sufficient
complexity analogous to the behavior seen in cancer. We will also
consider a 2D substitution searching for the qualities of division and
networking possibly revealing patterns seen in signal transduction
pathways and cellular organization.
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