A Latency Spectrum Framework for Interpreting Genomic Memory Across Biological Time
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
The prevailing binary paradigm of gene regulation—genes being either “on” or “off”—captures immediate transcriptional activity but remains insufficient for representing the temporal depth of biological systems [1,4]. Biological processes such as cellular memory, irreversible differentiation, and the ordered progression of chronic disease indicate that genomic elements can retain historical information that constrains future biological states [3,4]. While epigenetic mechanisms have substantially advanced understanding of regulatory persistence [1,7,8], existing frameworks provide limited means to describe, compare, or contextualize long-term genomic information that remains conditionally accessible yet non-executing across extended biological timescales [4].Here, we propose a conceptual framework for temporal genomics based on a Latency Spectrum, in which genomic elements—coding or non-coding—are characterized by their capacity to preserve information in non-executing states that remain conditionally retrievable. We outline five illustrative dimensions of this spectrum—Depth, Capacity, Retrieval Cost, Fidelity, and Duration—and discuss plausible biological correlates and empirical strategies through which each dimension may be examined.By conceptualizing gene latency as a graded and interpretable property rather than a binary condition, this framework refines how genomic memory, plasticity, and irreversibility can be understood across development, aging, and disease [3,8]. We suggest that systematic analysis of latency landscapes provides a foundation for integrating biological time into functional genomics and for advancing temporally informed models of genomic regulation [4].