By Ben Brumfield | Published May 24, 2018

If physics were to hand the other sciences the best arrow in its quiver, that arrow would probably be mathematics.

A new national project, which includes the Georgia Institute of Technology, aims to convey the benefits of physics’ age-old intertwining with math upon biology, a science historically less connected with it.

The National Science Foundation and the Simons Foundation have launched a large collaboration of bioscientists and mathematicians to advance both fields. The project will have a total of four centers funded with a total of $40 million, one of which is headquartered at Georgia Tech and will receive a fourth of the funding.

In the Southeast Center for Mathematics and Biology, eight researchers from Georgia Tech join forces with six researchers from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Tulane University, the University of Florida, the University of South Florida, Clemson University, and Duke University.



Christine Heitsch; professor in Georgia Tech's School of Mathematics Christine Heitsch; professor in Georgia Tech's School of Mathematics

For centuries, together mathematics and physics have shifted paradigms in science and rattled human perception by predicting planetary orbits, theorizing relativity or explaining how one particle can be in two places at the same time. Can theoretical math and biosystems team up to similarly shake the foundations of knowledge?

“We certainly think it’s possible,” said Christine Heitsch, a professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Mathematics who leads the new regional center. “But our immediate goals are more realistic,” she said. “Our first step is getting more mathematicians and bioscience researchers working together in research collaborations."

Bio-math synergy



Hang Lu; professor in Georgia Tech's School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Hang Lu; professor in Georgia Tech's School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

On an everyday basis, that means the Southeast Center for Mathematics and Biology (SCMB) headquartered at Georgia Tech will tackle open questions in biology using novel math.

“Math can potentially change the way we do our experiments,” said Hang Lu, a professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering who co-leads of the center. “If you model your data with topology (a field of mathematics) you see that your data can have a shape,” Lu said. “And that can make you go look for different kinds of data.”

“It will be a two-way street,” Heitsch said. “Math always benefits when it’s challenged by reality.”

Over time, the math-bio spiral could lead to eureka moments.

“Biological systems can look overwhelmingly complex, and that just means we haven’t found the right way of looking at them yet,” Heitsch said.

NSF-Simons vision

The SCMB is one of four NSF-Simons Research Centers for Mathematics of Complex Biological Systems. The other three are based at Harvard University, at the University of California, Irvine, and at Northwestern University. Together, they will not only advance the math-biosciences synergy but also spread their knowledge to hundreds of undergraduate and K-12 students throughout the region through educational outreaches.

The SCMB comprises 14 researchers, including collaborators throughout the Southeastern United States. Tulane University, the University of Florida, the University of South Florida, Clemson University, and the Oak Ridge National Laboratory are each contributing a mathematician, and one bioscientist is based at Duke University.

“This project has visionary potential to shake up the way we view biological systems, and also expand mathematics,” said Julia Kubanek, Associate Dean of Research in Georgia Tech’s College of Sciences. “The National Science Foundation and the Simons Foundation have shown tremendous foresight in creating these three centers, and I think headquartering one at Georgia Tech is a great fit because cross-connecting research disciplines is already one of our core missions.”

Biosciences enigmas

To understand the particular value of combining math with biosciences, it’s important to not conflate the latter with physics.

A graphic depiction of canalization. The path of the ball represents the development toward a phenotype, which may start with varying genetic foundations but roll out to secure phenotypical outcomes. But canalization can also lead to more than one possible phenotypical outcome from one set of genes.

For example, in relativity near-light speeds change an object’s mass, its length, and its passage through time. Those warped phenomena and their equations aren’t so applicable in the world of experimental biosciences, which live in a more Newtonian reality, but one with intricate enigmas for math to demystify.

Take the phenomenon called canalization, which saves living things from the little genetic snafus inside of us all by making sure that proper physical traits usually get produced in spite of mutations.

Clone contradictions

Canalization shatters a stubborn popular notion that genes determine how an organism is built.

“Genes are not deterministic,” said Lu, who is Love Family Professor. She studies the intricate pathways that lead from genetic foundations to measurable physical or behavioral traits, or phenotypes, in C. elegans roundworms. “You often have two individuals with identical genotypes (specific sets of genes) that have different sets of phenotypes.”

Data points measured in traits of a living organism can be transformed into shapes using mathematics called topology. These shapes can change the way a bioscience researcher views the data and collects new data.

That means that canalization may not offer just one but two options -- or more -- to form a trait based on a single set of genes. “What fascinates me is that you can have (C. elegans) clones that are genetically identical but exhibit different behavior,” Heitsch said.

Canalization is not new; it dates to 1942. But its labyrinthine mechanisms and how they “chose” one phenotypical pathway over the other still contain many mysteries. “Maybe math can help us find answers,” Lu said.

Labyrinthine intricacies

Algebra has already taken up canalization but at the SCMB, more maths will join in. Topology, computation, stochastics (principles of randomness), and geometry may enlighten canalization’s myriad interworkings of DNA, RNA, enzymes, protein folding, and just plain randomness.

Other questions SCMB bioscientists and mathematicians are pursuing:

How do stem cells know whether to become a neuron or a skin cell? How does one cell transport molecules to others? What exactly does RNA do to help repair DNA damage? Heitsch, for example, specializes in a field of mathematics called combinatorics, and she applies it to the way molecules of RNA fold.