Periodic Reporting for period 1 - EmulSim (Integrated simulations of active emulsions in complex environments)
Période du rapport: 2022-10-01 au 2025-03-31
Specifically, the objective of EmulSim is to provide a novel integrated simulation method incorporating relevant processes on all length scales. On the scale of individual droplets, it will incorporate the influence of driven reactions and elastic material properties of droplets. On the cellular scale, the effect of the elastic cytoskeleton and the presence of multiple compartments will be crucial. For each of these processes, we derive experimentally verified models using examples of relevant biological processes, including cell division, chromatin organization, and signaling. Combining the physical theories for these critical processes will culminate in an agent-based model describing a collection of droplets, ultimately also including thermal fluctuations. This novel simulation framework will model biomolecular condensates in their cellular environment taking key physical processes into account and providing a platform for future research and extensions to include additional processes. Taken together, the objective of EmulSim is to propel our understanding of biomolecular condensates and lay the ground for the development of novel therapies in medicine.
To understand how droplets interact with the cellular environments, we analyzed a theory that conceptualizes the cell as multiple connected compartments, e.g. formed by lipid membranes. We showed that the interplay between such compartmentalization, multimerization of molecules, and their unspecific interactions can have profound effects on phase separation. After publishing the theory, we are now in the process of validating the theories using the biologically relevant example of membrane patterning. Another example that we analyze in detail concerns droplets embedded in elastic meshes, like that formed by the cytoskeleton. We found that such meshes restrict droplet growth and can lead to a regular arrangement of droplets while also limiting their size.
We also made first steps toward the larger aim of building a flexible simulation framework, where the dynamics of droplets is described explicitly by incorporating the theories described above. We are already using this approach to study the biologically relevant example of crossover interference, which determines how maternal and paternal DNA are mixed during meiosis. We are currently incorporating thermal fluctuations into this framework to account for the small size of natural condensates