Analysis of Nonprocessive Molecular Motor Transport Using Renewal Reward Theory
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4686721
DOI10.1137/17M1156824zbMath1397.92038arXiv1711.04852WikidataQ129209441 ScholiaQ129209441MaRDI QIDQ4686721
Sean D. Lawley, Christopher E. Miles, James P. Keener
Publication date: 4 October 2018
Published in: SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1711.04852
Stochastic ordinary differential equations (aspects of stochastic analysis) (60H10) Biophysics (92C05) Applications of Markov renewal processes (reliability, queueing networks, etc.) (60K20) Applications of continuous-time Markov processes on discrete state spaces (60J28)
Related Items
Renewal reward perspective on linear switching diffusion systems in models of intracellular transport ⋮ Bidirectional, unlike unidirectional transport, allows transporting axonal cargos against their concentration gradient ⋮ A semi-Markov approach to study a group of kinesin motors ⋮ Effective behavior of cooperative and nonidentical molecular motors ⋮ Simulating rolling paths and reorientation behavior of ball-rolling dung beetles ⋮ How strong can the Parrondo effect be? ⋮ Collective Molecular Motor Transport
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Renewal-reward process formulation of motor protein dynamics
- Kinesins with extended neck linkers: A chemomechanical model for variable-length stepping
- Estimating velocity for processive motor proteins with random detachment
- On approximating the modified Bessel function of the second kind
- Asymptotic analysis of microtubule-based transport by multiple identical molecular motors
- Quasi-stationary distributions and population processes
- Stochastic processes in cell biology
- A matrix computational approach to kinesin neck linker extension
- Improved inequalities for the Poisson and binomial distribution and upper tail quantile functions
- Diffusion modifies the connectivity of kinetic schemes for multisite binding and catalysis
- Quasi-stationary distributions of birth-and-death processes
- Markov Chains
- Probability