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Active Matter Self-Organization Simulator (AMSOS): Combining biophysics and mechanics on HPC

ORAL

Abstract

We have developed a simulation package to study the large-scale behavior of assemblies formed by biofilaments and crosslinkers. Each crosslinker is explicitly tracked in space and its interactions with filaments are described by a two-stage explicit kinetic Monte-Carlo model. Binding-unbinding events of a motor are modeled based on free-energy changes between unbound, singly bound, and doubly bound states, in a way that preserves detailed balance. Crosslinkers binding two filaments walk and diffuse along the filaments thus moving the filaments relative to each other. We use a new numerical method based on geometrically constrained optimization to guarantee that steric interactions and crosslinker binding forces between filaments are properly and efficiently handled. These developments are integrated into a massively parallel software package -- AMSOS -- whose application we demonstrate by a few examples, including aster formation in confinement and self-contracting bundles consisting of more than 100,000 microtubules and motor proteins.

Presenters

  • Wen Yan

    Center for Computational Biology, Flatiron Institute, Simons Foundation

Authors

  • Wen Yan

    Center for Computational Biology, Flatiron Institute, Simons Foundation

  • Adam Lamson

    Department of Physics, University of Colorado Boulder

  • Saad Ansari

    Department of Physics, University of Colorado Boulder

  • Meredith D Betterton

    University of Colorado Boulder, Department of Physics, University of Colorado Boulder

  • Michael Shelley

    Simons Foundation, CCB, Flatiron Institute, Flatiron Institute/NYU, Flatiron Institute and New York University, Flatiron Institute, Center for Computational Biology, Simons Foundation, Center for Computational Biology, Flatiron Institute, Center for Computational Biology, Flatiron Institute, Simons Foundation, Courant/NYU and Flatironinstitute