Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10872745 | FEBS Letters | 2005 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
How cells utilize intracellular spatial features to optimize their signaling characteristics is still not clearly understood. The physical distance between the cell-surface receptor and the gene expression machinery, fast reactions, and slow protein diffusion coefficients are some of the properties that contribute to their intricacy. This article reviews computational frameworks that can help biologists to elucidate the implications of space in signaling pathways. We argue that intracellular macromolecular crowding is an important modeling issue, and describe how recent simulation methods can reproduce this phenomenon in either implicit, semi-explicit or fully explicit representation.
Keywords
PDEIntracellular spaceDPDFCSFRAPODEThree-dimensionalCellular automataExcluded volume effectMolecular crowdingBrownian DynamicsDissipative particle dynamicsMolecular dynamicsSystems biologyLattice BoltzmannSimulationfluorescence correlation spectroscopyfluorescence recovery after photobleachingSignaling pathwayPartial differential equationordinary differential equation
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Authors
Kouichi Takahashi, Satya Nanda Vel Arjunan, Masaru Tomita,