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1.
J Chem Phys ; 151(16): 164105, 2019 Oct 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31675872

RESUMEN

The kinetics of bimolecular reactions in solution depends, among other factors, on intermolecular forces such as steric repulsion or electrostatic interaction. Microscopically, a pair of molecules first has to meet by diffusion before the reaction can take place. In this work, we establish an extension of Doi's volume reaction model to molecules interacting via pair potentials, which is a key ingredient for interacting-particle-based reaction-diffusion (iPRD) simulations. As a central result, we relate model parameters and macroscopic reaction rate constants in this situation. We solve the corresponding reaction-diffusion equation in the steady state and derive semi-analytical expressions for the reaction rate constant and the local concentration profiles. Our results apply to the full spectrum from well-mixed to diffusion-limited kinetics. For limiting cases, we give explicit formulas, and we provide a computationally inexpensive numerical scheme for the general case, including the intermediate, diffusion-influenced regime. The obtained rate constants decompose uniquely into encounter and formation rates, and we discuss the effect of the potential on both subprocesses, exemplified for a soft harmonic repulsion and a Lennard-Jones potential. The analysis is complemented by extensive stochastic iPRD simulations, and we find excellent agreement with the theoretical predictions.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Químicos , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Difusión , Cinética
2.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 15(2): e1006830, 2019 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30818351

RESUMEN

Interacting-particle reaction dynamics (iPRD) combines the simulation of dynamical trajectories of interacting particles as in molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with reaction kinetics, in which particles appear, disappear, or change their type and interactions based on a set of reaction rules. This combination facilitates the simulation of reaction kinetics in crowded environments, involving complex molecular geometries such as polymers, and employing complex reaction mechanisms such as breaking and fusion of polymers. iPRD simulations are ideal to simulate the detailed spatiotemporal reaction mechanism in complex and dense environments, such as in signalling processes at cellular membranes, or in nano- to microscale chemical reactors. Here we introduce the iPRD software ReaDDy 2, which provides a Python interface in which the simulation environment, particle interactions and reaction rules can be conveniently defined and the simulation can be run, stored and analyzed. A C++ interface is available to enable deeper and more flexible interactions with the framework. The main computational work of ReaDDy 2 is done in hardware-specific simulation kernels. While the version introduced here provides single- and multi-threading CPU kernels, the architecture is ready to implement GPU and multi-node kernels. We demonstrate the efficiency and validity of ReaDDy 2 using several benchmark examples. ReaDDy 2 is available at the https://readdy.github.io/ website.


Asunto(s)
Biología Computacional/métodos , Cinética , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular/estadística & datos numéricos , Algoritmos , Simulación por Computador , Difusión , Modelos Biológicos , Programas Informáticos
3.
J Chem Phys ; 150(2): 025101, 2019 Jan 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30646700

RESUMEN

The inner workings of a biological cell or a chemical reactor can be rationalized by the network of reactions, whose structure reveals the most important functional mechanisms. For complex systems, these reaction networks are not known a priori and cannot be efficiently computed with ab initio methods; therefore, an important goal is to estimate effective reaction networks from observations, such as time series of the main species. Reaction networks estimated with standard machine learning techniques such as least-squares regression may fit the observations but will typically contain spurious reactions. Here we extend the sparse identification of nonlinear dynamics (SINDy) method to vector-valued ansatz functions, each describing a particular reaction process. The resulting sparse tensor regression method "reactive SINDy" is able to estimate a parsimonious reaction network. We illustrate that a gene regulation network can be correctly estimated from observed time series.

4.
J Phys Chem B ; 122(49): 11240-11250, 2018 12 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30125111

RESUMEN

Interacting-particle reaction dynamics (iPRD) simulates the spatiotemporal evolution of particles that experience interaction forces and can react with one another. The combination of interaction forces and reactions enables a wide range of complex reactive systems in biology and chemistry to be simulated, but gives rise to new questions such as how to evolve the dynamical equations in a computationally efficient and statistically correct manner. Here we consider reversible reactions such as A + B ⇄ C with interacting particles and derive expressions for the microscopic iPRD simulation parameters such that desired values for the equilibrium constant and the dissociation rate are obtained in the dilute limit. We then introduce a Monte Carlo algorithm that ensures detailed balance in the iPRD time-evolution (iPRD-DB). iPRD-DB guarantees the correct thermodynamics at all concentrations and maintains the desired kinetics in the dilute limit, where chemical rates are well-defined and kinetic measurement experiments usually operate. We show that in dense particle systems, the incorporation of detailed balance is essential to obtain physically realistic solutions. iPRD-DB is implemented in ReaDDy 2.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Químicos , Algoritmos , Química Física/métodos , Simulación por Computador , Difusión , Cinética , Método de Montecarlo
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