Entrainment and Control of Bacterial Populations: An in Silico Study over a Spatially Extended Agent Based Model
Authored by Petros Mina, Krasimira Tsaneva-Atanasova, Bernardo Mario di
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1021/acssynbio.5b00243
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
Platforms:
BSim
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We extend a spatially explicit agent based model (ABM) developed
previously to investigate entrainment and control of the emergent
behavior of a population of synchronized oscillating cells in a
microfluidic chamber. Unlike most of the work in models of control of
cellular systems which focus on temporal changes, we model individual
cells with spatial dependencies which may contribute to certain
behavioral responses. We use the model to investigate the response of
both open loop and closed loop strategies, such as proportional control
(P-control), proportional-integral control (PI-control) and
proportional-integral-derivative control (PID-control), to
heterogeinities and growth in the cell population, variations of the
control parameters and spatial effects such as diffusion in the
spatially explicit setting of a microfluidic chamber setup. We show
that, as expected from the theory of phase locking in dynamical systems, open loop control can only entrain the cell population in a subset of
forcing periods, with a wide variety of dynamical behaviors obtained
outside these regions of entrainment. Closed-loop control is shown
instead to guarantee entrainment in a much wider region of control
parameter space although presenting limitations when the population size
increases over a certain threshold. In silico tracking experiments are
also performed to validate the ability of classical control approaches
to achieve other reference behaviors such as a desired constant output
or a linearly varying one. All simulations are carried out in BSim, an
advanced agent-based simulator of microbial population which is here
extended ad hoc to include the effects of control strategies acting onto
the population.
Tags
Design
Dynamics
networks
Feedback
synchronization
oscillations
Gene-expression
Convergent signaling modules
Neurohormone pulse frequency
Microfluidics