Particle-based membrane model for mesoscopic simulation of cellular dynamics
Mohsen Sadeghi, Thomas R. Weikl, Frank No\'e

TL;DR
This paper introduces a computationally efficient particle-based membrane model that accurately simulates the mechanical and dynamical properties of lipid bilayers, suitable for mesoscopic cellular dynamics simulations.
Contribution
The authors develop a solvent-free, coarse-grained membrane model based on interacting particles that reproduces membrane mechanics and fluidity, validated through multiple physical tests.
Findings
Accurately captures thermal undulation dynamics.
Reproduces input bending stiffness and membrane elasticity.
Allows tuning of membrane viscosity and simulates large deformations.
Abstract
We present a simple and computationally efficient coarse-grained and solvent-free model for simulating lipid bilayer membranes. In order to be used in concert with particle-based reaction-diffusion simulations, the model is purely based on interacting and reacting particles, each representing a coarse patch of a lipid monolayer. Particle interactions include nearest-neighbor bond-stretching and angle-bending, and are parameterized so as to reproduce the local membrane mechanics given by the Helfrich energy density over a range of relevant curvatures. In-plane fluidity is implemented with Monte Carlo bond-flipping moves. The physical accuracy of the model is verified by five tests: (i) Power spectrum analysis of equilibrium thermal undulations is used to verify that the particle-based representation correctly captures the dynamics predicted by the continuum model of fluid membranes. (ii)…
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