Abstract

AbstractA distributed reaction system consists of a finite set of reaction systems that either interact with a common environment or interact with each other by communicating products or reactions. A reaction system is a well-known qualitative formal model of interactions between biochemical reactions. A reaction is a triplet of nonempty sets representing chemicals, called the set of reactants, the set of inhibitors, and the set of products. A reaction corresponds to a chemical reaction performed on a set of chemicals, and a reaction system is a finite nonempty set of reactions. In this paper, we examine two variants of distributed reaction systems. We introduce the notion of a distributed reaction system with communication by request (a qDRS for short), where sets of products are communicated between the component reaction systems by queries. First, we show that every qDRS can be represented by a reaction system. After that we compare distributed reaction systems with communication by request to extended distributed reaction systems (EDRSs), models that were introduced in a previous paper. We prove that extended distributed reaction systems, where a context automaton provides input for the component reaction systems, simulate distributed reaction systems with communication by request and distributed reaction systems with communication by request simulate special variants of extended distributed reaction systems. Furthermore, we assign languages to these two variants of distributed reaction systems. We prove that the class of agreement languages of extended distributed reaction systems is equal to the class of languages of nondeterministic multihead finite automata and the agreement language of every distributed reaction system with communication by request is an element of a certain subregular language class.

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