Reaction-diffusion kinetics on lattice at the microscopic scale
Wei-Xiang Chew, Kazunari Kaizu, Masaki Watabe, Sithi V. Muniandy,, Koichi Takahashi, Satya N. V. Arjunan

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework for the microscopic lattice method (MLM) to simulate diffusion-influenced reactions in cells, validating it against other models and demonstrating its efficiency and ability to capture complex kinetics.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed theoretical analysis of MLM, deriving analytical expressions for reaction rates and validating the method against established models.
Findings
MLM accurately predicts reaction kinetics and rebinding probabilities.
MLM is over ten times faster than eGFRD in typical cellular conditions.
MLM captures non-classical kinetics due to volume exclusion and anomalous diffusion.
Abstract
Lattice-based stochastic simulators are commonly used to study biological reaction-diffusion processes. Some of these schemes that are based on the reaction-diffusion master equation (RDME), can simulate for extended spatial and temporal scales but cannot directly account for the microscopic effects in the cell such as volume exclusion and diffusion-influenced reactions. Nonetheless, schemes based on the high-resolution microscopic lattice method (MLM) can directly simulate these effects by representing each finite-sized molecule explicitly as a random walker on fine lattice voxels. The theory and consistency of MLM in simulating diffusion-influenced reactions have not been clarified in detail. Here, we examine MLM in solving diffusion-influenced reactions in 3D space by employing the Spatiocyte simulation scheme. Applying the random walk theory, we construct the general theoretical…
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