From individual to collective behavior of unicellular organisms: Recent results and open problems

Chuan Xue, Hans G. Othmer, Radek Erban

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

The collective movements of unicellular organisms such as bacteria or amoeboid (crawling) cells are often modeled by partial differential equations (PDEs) that describe the time evolution of cell density. In particular, chemotaxis equations have been used to model the movement towards various kinds of extracellular cues. Well-developed analytical and numerical methods for analyzing the time-dependent and time-independent properties of solutions make this approach attractive. However, these models are often based on phenomenological descriptions of cell fluxes with no direct correspondence to individual cell processes such signal transduction and cell movement. This leads to the question of how to justify these macroscopic PDEs from microscopic descriptions of cells, and how to relate the macroscopic quantities in these PDEs to individual-level parameters. Here we summarize recent progress on this question in the context of bacterial and amoeboid chemotaxis, and formulate several open problems.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationMultiscale Phenomena in Biology - Proceedings of the 2nd Conference on Mathematics and Biology
Pages3-14
Number of pages12
DOIs
StatePublished - 2009
Event2nd Conference on Mathematics and Biology: Multiscale Phenomena in Biology - Okinawa, Japan
Duration: Nov 4 2008Nov 6 2008

Publication series

NameAIP Conference Proceedings
Volume1167
ISSN (Print)0094-243X
ISSN (Electronic)1551-7616

Other

Other2nd Conference on Mathematics and Biology: Multiscale Phenomena in Biology
Country/TerritoryJapan
CityOkinawa
Period11/4/0811/6/08

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