Analysis and remedy of negativity problem in hybrid stochastic simulation algorithm and its application

Abstract Background The hybrid stochastic simulation algorithm, proposed by Haseltine and Rawlings (HR), is a combination of differential equations for traditional deterministic models and Gillespie’s algorithm (SSA) for stochastic models. The HR hybrid method can significantly improve the efficienc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Minghan Chen, Yang Cao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:BMC Bioinformatics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12859-019-2836-z
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Summary:Abstract Background The hybrid stochastic simulation algorithm, proposed by Haseltine and Rawlings (HR), is a combination of differential equations for traditional deterministic models and Gillespie’s algorithm (SSA) for stochastic models. The HR hybrid method can significantly improve the efficiency of stochastic simulations for multiscale biochemical networks. Previous studies on the accuracy analysis for a linear chain reaction system showed that the HR hybrid method is accurate if the scale difference between fast and slow reactions is above a certain threshold, regardless of population scales. However, the population of some reactant species might be driven negative if they are involved in both deterministic and stochastic systems. Results This work investigates the negativity problem of the HR hybrid method, analyzes and tests it with several models including a linear chain system, a nonlinear reaction system, and a realistic biological cell cycle system. As a benchmark, the second slow reaction firing time is used to measure the effect of negative populations on the accuracy of the HR hybrid method. Our analysis demonstrates that usually the error caused by negative populations is negligible compared with approximation errors of the HR hybrid method itself, and sometimes negativity phenomena may even improve the accuracy. But for systems where negative species are involved in nonlinear reactions or some species are highly sensitive to negative species, the system stability will be influenced and may lead to system failure when using the HR hybrid method. In those circumstances, three remedies are studied for the negativity problem. Conclusion The results of different models and examples suggest that the Zero-Reaction rule is a good remedy for nonlinear and sensitive systems considering its efficiency and simplicity.
ISSN:1471-2105