Agent-Based Spatiotemporal Simulation of Biomolecular Systems within the Open Source MASON Framework
Authored by Gael Perez-Rodriguez, Martin Perez-Perez, Daniel Glez-Pena, Florentino Fdez-Riverola, Nuno F Azevedo, Analia Lourenco
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1155/2015/769471
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
MASON
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Agent-based modelling is being used to represent biological systems with
increasing frequency and success. This paper presents the implementation
of a new tool for biomolecular reaction modelling in the open source
Multiagent Simulator of Neighborhoods framework. The rationale behind
this new tool is the necessity to describe interactions at the molecular
level to be able to grasp emergent and meaningful biological behaviour.
We are particularly interested in characterising and quantifying the
various effects that facilitate biocatalysis. Enzymes may display high
specificity for their substrates and this information is crucial to the
engineering and optimisation of bioprocesses. Simulation results
demonstrate that molecule distributions, reaction rate parameters, and
structural parameters can be adjusted separately in the simulation
allowing a comprehensive study of individual effects in the context of
realistic cell environments. While higher percentage of collisions with
occurrence of reaction increases the affinity of the enzyme to the
substrate, a faster reaction (i.e., turnover number) leads to a smaller
number of time steps. Slower diffusion rates and molecular crowding
(physical hurdles) decrease the collision rate of reactants, hence
reducing the reaction rate, as expected. Also, the random distribution
of molecules affects the results significantly.
Tags
microorganisms
synthetic biology
Escherichia-coli
Biocellion
Chemicals