Integrating Actin and Myosin II in a Viscous Model for Cell Migration
This article presents a mathematical and computational model for cell migration that couples a system of reaction-advection-diffusion equations describing the bio-molecular interactions between F-actin and myosin II to a force balance equation describing the structural mechanics of the actin-myosin...
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2020-08-01
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Online Access: | https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fams.2020.00026/full |
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doaj-6f2157c893354235941c766b8e48885d2020-11-25T02:59:25ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Applied Mathematics and Statistics2297-46872020-08-01610.3389/fams.2020.00026539844Integrating Actin and Myosin II in a Viscous Model for Cell MigrationAnotida MadzvamuseBenard Kipchumba KiplangatThis article presents a mathematical and computational model for cell migration that couples a system of reaction-advection-diffusion equations describing the bio-molecular interactions between F-actin and myosin II to a force balance equation describing the structural mechanics of the actin-myosin network. In eukaryotic cells, cell migration is largely powered by a system of actin and myosin dynamics. We formulate the model equations on a two-dimensional cellular migrating evolving domain to take into account the convective and dilution terms for the biochemical reaction-diffusion equations, with hypothetically proposed reaction-kinetics. We employ the evolving finite element method to compute approximate numerical solutions of the coupled biomechanical model in two dimensions. Numerical experiments exhibit cell polarization through symmetry breaking which are driven by the F-actin and myosin II. This conceptual hypothetical proof-of-concept framework set premises for studying experimentally-driven actin-myosin reaction-kinetic network interactions with generalizations to multi-dimensions.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fams.2020.00026/fullcell migrationviscous modelreaction-advection-diffusion equationsforce balance equationevolving finite element method |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Anotida Madzvamuse Benard Kipchumba Kiplangat |
spellingShingle |
Anotida Madzvamuse Benard Kipchumba Kiplangat Integrating Actin and Myosin II in a Viscous Model for Cell Migration Frontiers in Applied Mathematics and Statistics cell migration viscous model reaction-advection-diffusion equations force balance equation evolving finite element method |
author_facet |
Anotida Madzvamuse Benard Kipchumba Kiplangat |
author_sort |
Anotida Madzvamuse |
title |
Integrating Actin and Myosin II in a Viscous Model for Cell Migration |
title_short |
Integrating Actin and Myosin II in a Viscous Model for Cell Migration |
title_full |
Integrating Actin and Myosin II in a Viscous Model for Cell Migration |
title_fullStr |
Integrating Actin and Myosin II in a Viscous Model for Cell Migration |
title_full_unstemmed |
Integrating Actin and Myosin II in a Viscous Model for Cell Migration |
title_sort |
integrating actin and myosin ii in a viscous model for cell migration |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Applied Mathematics and Statistics |
issn |
2297-4687 |
publishDate |
2020-08-01 |
description |
This article presents a mathematical and computational model for cell migration that couples a system of reaction-advection-diffusion equations describing the bio-molecular interactions between F-actin and myosin II to a force balance equation describing the structural mechanics of the actin-myosin network. In eukaryotic cells, cell migration is largely powered by a system of actin and myosin dynamics. We formulate the model equations on a two-dimensional cellular migrating evolving domain to take into account the convective and dilution terms for the biochemical reaction-diffusion equations, with hypothetically proposed reaction-kinetics. We employ the evolving finite element method to compute approximate numerical solutions of the coupled biomechanical model in two dimensions. Numerical experiments exhibit cell polarization through symmetry breaking which are driven by the F-actin and myosin II. This conceptual hypothetical proof-of-concept framework set premises for studying experimentally-driven actin-myosin reaction-kinetic network interactions with generalizations to multi-dimensions. |
topic |
cell migration viscous model reaction-advection-diffusion equations force balance equation evolving finite element method |
url |
https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fams.2020.00026/full |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT anotidamadzvamuse integratingactinandmyosiniiinaviscousmodelforcellmigration AT benardkipchumbakiplangat integratingactinandmyosiniiinaviscousmodelforcellmigration |
_version_ |
1724702436197662720 |