Information, Geometry, and Chaos: Revealing Latent Cysteine Butterflies on Fractal Redox Shapes in the Proteomic Spectra
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Reversible cysteine oxidation is a central mechanism of protein regulation, commonly studied through advanced redox proteomic workflows that systematically catalogue the redox state of thousands of residues. Excitingly, these expansive datasets contain latent information that remains largely untapped. In this work, we propose that principles from information theory, signal geometry, and chaos theory can reveal hidden meaning within these data—illuminating dynamic regulation, molecular memory, and the interplay between order and chaos in redox biology. Drawing on concepts such as Shannon entropy, Fisher information, and spectral energy, we show how variability and spread in redox signals may reflect structured, condition-specific differences rather than random noise. We further define a mathematical basis for a cysteine redox butterfly effect on fractal redox manifolds where sensitivity to initial conditions produces chaotic responses. Even simple entropy-based metrics can uncover coherent patterns in existing datasets, motivating a conceptual shift in how redox proteomic data can analyzed and interpreted. We further propose that oxidation can be viewed as a probabilistic signal field shaped by underlying biochemical, spatial, and evolutionary constraints. This reframing opens new avenues for extracting insight from existing data and offers a conceptual bridge toward future models of redox biology.