In this article a novel model framework to simulate cells and their internal structure is described. The model is agent-based and suitable to simulate single cells with a detailed internal structure as well as multi-cellular compounds. Cells are simulated as a set of many interacting particles, with neighborhood relations defined via a Delaunay triangulation. The interacting sub-particles of a cell can assume specific roles - i.e., membrane sub-particle, internal sub-particle, organelles, etc -, distinguished by specific interaction potentials and, eventually, also by the use of modified interaction criteria. For example, membrane sub-particles may interact only on a two-dimensional surface embedded on three-dimensional space, described via a restricted Delaunay triangulation. The model can be used not only to study cell shape and movement, but also has the potential to investigate the coupling between internal space-resolved movement of molecules and determined cell behaviors. © EDP Sciences, 2010.
CITATION STYLE
Grise, G., & Meyer-Hermann, M. (2010). Towards sub-cellular modeling with delaunay triangulation. Mathematical Modelling of Natural Phenomena, 5(1), 224–238. https://doi.org/10.1051/mmnp/20083710
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