Abstract

BackgroundStudies using quantitative experimental methods have shown that intracellular spatial distribution of molecules plays a central role in many cellular systems. Spatially resolved computer simulations can integrate quantitative data from these experiments to construct physically accurate models of the systems. Although computationally expensive, microscopic resolution reaction-diffusion simulators, such as Spatiocyte can directly capture intracellular effects comprising diffusion-limited reactions and volume exclusion from crowded molecules by explicitly representing individual diffusing molecules in space. To alleviate the steep computational cost typically associated with the simulation of large or crowded intracellular compartments, we present a parallelized Spatiocyte method called pSpatiocyte.ResultsThe new high-performance method employs unique parallelization schemes on hexagonal close-packed (HCP) lattice to efficiently exploit the resources of common workstations and large distributed memory parallel computers. We introduce a coordinate system for fast accesses to HCP lattice voxels, a parallelized event scheduler, a parallelized Gillespie’s direct-method for unimolecular reactions, and a parallelized event for diffusion and bimolecular reaction processes. We verified the correctness of pSpatiocyte reaction and diffusion processes by comparison to theory. To evaluate the performance of pSpatiocyte, we performed a series of parallelized diffusion runs on the RIKEN K computer. In the case of fine lattice discretization with low voxel occupancy, pSpatiocyte exhibited 74% parallel efficiency and achieved a speedup of 7686 times with 663552 cores compared to the runtime with 64 cores. In the weak scaling performance, pSpatiocyte obtained efficiencies of at least 60% with up to 663552 cores. When executing the Michaelis-Menten benchmark model on an eight-core workstation, pSpatiocyte required 45- and 55-fold shorter runtimes than Smoldyn and the parallel version of ReaDDy, respectively. As a high-performance application example, we study the dual phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle of the MAPK system, a typical reaction network motif in cell signaling pathways.ConclusionspSpatiocyte demonstrates good accuracies, fast runtimes and a significant performance advantage over well-known microscopic particle methods in large-scale simulations of intracellular reaction-diffusion systems. The source code of pSpatiocyte is available at https://spatiocyte.org.

Highlights

  • Studies using quantitative experimental methods have shown that intracellular spatial distribution of molecules plays a central role in many cellular systems

  • We demonstrate the performance of pSpatiocyte on the RIKEN K computer with thousands of cores and on a common workstation with eight cores

  • We show the applicability of pSpatiocyte in actual biological problems by simulating the dual phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Studies using quantitative experimental methods have shown that intracellular spatial distribution of molecules plays a central role in many cellular systems. Recent quantitative biology methods can obtain high-resolution spatiotemporal measurements of the molecules These disparate sources of measurements can be combined and interpreted using spatially resolved simulators to construct models of the systems that are realistic and consistent with physical principles. It is not feasible to use MD for example, to simulate cell signaling systems such as the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade, which takes place at the cellular scale with timescales spanning minutes to hours [17, 18] For these longer spatial and temporal scales, numerical methods that solve partial differential equations (PDEs) or coarse-grained stochastic particle simulation methods can be used. Particle methods are preferable when we need to account for the noise and fluctuations arising from low copy number of reacting molecules in the cell [20]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call