Narrow escape in composite domains forming heterogeneous networks
Fr\'ed\'eric Paquin-Lefebvre, Kanishka Basnayake, David Holcman

TL;DR
This paper models diffusion in composite cellular networks with narrow passages, deriving formulas for mean first passage times to targets, revealing how network geometry influences transport times in biological systems.
Contribution
It introduces asymptotic formulas for MFPT in heterogeneous networks with narrow passages, combining analytical solutions and simulations.
Findings
Mean first passage time depends on target and passage sizes.
Formulas validated against numerical solutions and simulations.
Transport times are controlled by network geometry.
Abstract
Cellular networks are often composed of thin tubules connecting much larger node compartments. These structures serve for active or diffusion transport of proteins. Examples are glial networks in the brain, the endoplasmic reticulum in cells or dendritic spines located on dendrites. In this latter case, a large ball forming the head is connected by a narrow passage. In all cases, how the transport of molecules, ions or proteins is regulated determines the time scale of chemical reactions or signal transduction. In the present study, based on modeling diffusion in three dimensions, we compute the mean time for a Brownian particle to reach a narrow target inside such a composite network made of tubules connected to spherical nodes. We derive asymptotic formulas by solving a mixed Neumann-Dirichlet boundary value problem with small Dirichlet part. We first consider the case of a network…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiffusion and Search Dynamics · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks · stochastic dynamics and bifurcation
