Decision Problems in Membrane Systems with Peripheral Proteins, Transport and Evolution

Cavaliere, Matteo and Sedwards, Sean (2006) Decision Problems in Membrane Systems with Peripheral Proteins, Transport and Evolution. UNSPECIFIED.

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    Abstract

    Transport of substances and communication between compartments are fundamental biological processes, often mediated by the presence of complementary proteins attached to the surfaces of membranes. Within compartments, substances are acted upon by local biochemical rules. Inspired by this behaviour we present a model based on Membrane Systems, with objects attached to the sides of the membranes and floating objects that can be moved between the regions of the system. Moreover, in each region there are evolution rules that rewrite the transported objects, mimicking chemical reactions. We investigate qualitative properties, like configuration reachability, in relation to the use of cooperative or non-cooperative evolution and transport rules and in the contexts of free- and maximal-parallel evolution. This is a preliminary version of a paper that was published in Theoretical Computer Science, 404, pp. 40–51, 2008. The original publication is available at http://www.elsevier.com/locate/tcs

    Item Type: Departmental Technical Report
    Department or Research center: CoSBi (Center for Computational and Systems Biology)
    Subjects: Q Science > QA Mathematics > QA076 Computer software > QA076.7 Programming Languages - Semantics
    Report Number: TR-12-2006
    Repository staff approval on: 30 Nov 2009

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