ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Uniform asymptotic approximation of diffusion to a small target

64   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Samuel Isaacson
 تاريخ النشر 2013
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

The problem of the time required for a diffusing molecule, within a large bounded domain, to first locate a small target is prevalent in biological modeling. Here we study this problem for a small spherical target. We develop uniform in time asymptotic expansions in the target radius of the solution to the corresponding diffusion equation. Our approach is based on combining short-time expansions using pseudo-potential approximations with long-time expansions based on first eigenvalue and eigenfunction approximations. These expansions allow the calculation of corresponding expansions of the first passage time density for the diffusing molecule to find the target. We demonstrate the accuracy of our method in approximating the first passage time density and related statistics for the spherically symmetric problem where the domain is a large concentric sphere about a small target centered at the origin.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

337 - Yuichi Itto 2017
In their work [Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 112 (2015) E5725], Bosse et al. experimentally showed that virus capsid exhibits not only normal diffusion but also anomalous diffusion in nucleus of a living cell. There, it was found that the distribution o f fluctuations of the diffusion exponent characterizing them takes the Gaussian form, which is, quite remarkably, the same form for two different types of the virus. This suggests high robustness of such fluctuations. Here, the statistical property of local fluctuations of the diffusion exponent of the virus capsid in the nucleus is studied. A maximum-entropy-principle approach (originally proposed for a different virus in a different cell) is applied for obtaining the fluctuation distribution of the exponent. Largeness of the number of blocks identified with local areas of interchromatin corrals is also examined based on the experimental data. It is shown that the Gaussian distribution of the local fluctuations can be derived, in accordance with the above form. In addition, it is quantified how the fluctuation distribution on a long time scale is different from the Gaussian distribution.
DNA is a flexible molecule, but the degree of its flexibility is subject to debate. The commonly-accepted persistence length of $l_p approx 500,$AA is inconsistent with recent studies on short-chain DNA that show much greater flexibility but do not p robe its origin. We have performed X-ray and neutron small-angle scattering on a short DNA sequence containing a strong nucleosome positioning element, and analyzed the results using a modified Kratky-Porod model to determine possible conformations. Our results support a hypothesis from Crick and Klug in 1975 that some DNA sequences in solution can have sharp kinks, potentially resolving the discrepancy. Our conclusions are supported by measurements on a radiation-damaged sample, where single-strand breaks lead to increased flexibility and by an analysis of data from another sequence, which does not have kinks, but where our method can detect a locally enhanced flexibility due to an $AT$-domain.
Assuming a steady-state condition within a cell, metabolic fluxes satisfy an under-determined linear system of stoichiometric equations. Characterizing the space of fluxes that satisfy such equations along with given bounds (and possibly additional r elevant constraints) is considered of utmost importance for the understanding of cellular metabolism. Extreme values for each individual flux can be computed with Linear Programming (as Flux Balance Analysis), and their marginal distributions can be approximately computed with Monte-Carlo sampling. Here we present an approximate analytic method for the latter task based on Expectation Propagation equations that does not involve sampling and can achieve much better predictions than other existing analytic methods. The method is iterative, and its computation time is dominated by one matrix inversion per iteration. With respect to sampling, we show through extensive simulation that it has some advantages including computation time, and the ability to efficiently fix empirically estimated distributions of fluxes.
78 - Soumendu Ghosh 2018
Several important biological processes are initiated by the binding of a protein to a specific site on the DNA. The strategy adopted by a protein, called transcription factor (TF), for searching its specific binding site on the DNA has been investiga ted over several decades. In recent times the effects obstacles, like DNA-binding proteins, on the search by TF has begun to receive attention. RNA polymerase (RNAP) motors collectively move along a segment of the DNA during a genomic process called transcription. This RNAP traffic is bound to affect the diffusive scanning of the same segment of the DNA by a TF searching for its binding site. Motivated by this phenomenon, here we develop a kinetic model where a `particle, that represents a TF, searches for a specific site on a one-dimensional lattice. On the same lattice another species of particles, each representing a RNAP, hop from left to right exactly as in a totally asymmetric simple exclusion process (TASEP) which forbids simultaneous occupation of any site by more than one particle, irrespective of their identities. Although the TF is allowed to attach to or detach from any lattice site, the RNAPs can attach only to the first site at the left edge and detach from only the last site on the right edge of the lattice. We formulate the search as a {it first-passage} process; the time taken to reach the target site {it for the first time}, starting from a well defined initial state, is the search time. By approximate analytical calculations and Monte Carlo (MC) computer simulations, we calculate the mean search time. We show that RNAP traffic rectifies the diffusive motion of TF to that of a Brownian ratchet, and the mean time of successful search can be even shorter than that required in the absence of RNAP traffic. Moreover, we show that there is an optimal rate of detachment that corresponds to the shortest mean search time.
66 - Yuichi Itto 2016
The exponent of anomalous diffusion of virus in cytoplasm of a living cell is experimentally known to fluctuate depending on localized areas of the cytoplasm, indicating heterogeneity of diffusion. In a recent paper (Itto, 2012), a maximum-entropy-pr inciple approach has been developed in order to propose an Ansatz for the statistical distribution of such exponent fluctuations. Based on this approach, here the deviation of the statistical distribution of the fluctuations from the proposed one is studied from the viewpoint of Einsteins theory of fluctuations (of the thermodynamic quantities). This may present a step toward understanding the statistical property of the deviation. It is shown in a certain class of small deviations that the deviation obeys the multivariate Gaussian distribution.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا