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- Modeling Cytoskeletal Traffic: An Interplay between Passive Diffusion and Active Transport doi link

Auteur(s): Neri I., Kern N., Parmeggiani A.

(Article) Publié: Physical Review Letters, vol. 110 p.098102 (2013)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : arxiv


Ref HAL: hal-00805162_v1
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.098102
WoS: 000315488300017
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
57 Citations
Résumé:

We introduce the totally asymmetric simple exclusion process with Langmuir kinetics on a network as a microscopic model for active motor protein transport on the cytoskeleton, immersed in the diffusive cytoplasm.We discuss how the interplay between active transport along a network and infinite diffusion in a bulk reservoir leads to a heterogeneous matter distribution on various scales: we find three regimes for steady state transport, corresponding to the scale of the network, of individual segments, or local to sites. At low exchange rates strong density heterogeneities develop between different segments in the network. In this regime one has to consider the topological complexity of the whole network to describe transport. In contrast, at moderate exchange rates the transport through the network decouples, and the physics is determined by single segments and the local topology. At last, for very high exchange rates the homogeneous Langmuir process dominates the stationary state. We introduce effective rate diagrams for the network to identify these different regimes. Based on this method we develop an intuitive but generic picture of how the stationary state of excluded volume processes on complex networks can be understood in terms of the single-segment phase diagram.