4.5 Article

NERDSS: A Nonequilibrium Simulator for Multibody Self-Assembly at the Cellular Scale

期刊

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
卷 118, 期 12, 页码 3026-3040

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2020.05.002

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资金

  1. National Science Foundation CAREER Award [1753174]
  2. National Institutes of Health MIRA Award [R35GM133644]
  3. Division Of Chemistry
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1753174] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Currently, a significant barrier to building predictive models of cellular self-assembly processes is that molecular models cannot capture minutes-long dynamics that couple distinct components with active processes, whereas reaction-diffusion models cannot capture structures of molecular assembly. Here, we introduce the nonequilibrium reaction-diffusion self-assembly simulator (NERDSS), which addresses this spatiotemporal resolution gap. NERDSS integrates efficient reaction-diffusion algorithms into generalized software that operates on user-defined molecules through diffusion, binding and orientation, unbinding, chemical transformations, and spatial localization. By connecting the fast processes of binding with the slow timescales of large-scale assembly, NERDSS integrates molecular resolution with reversible formation of ordered, multisubunit complexes. NERDSS encodes models using rule-based formatting languages to facilitate model portability, usability, and reproducibility. Applying NERDSS to steps in clathrin-mediated endocytosis, we design multicomponent systems that can form lattices in solution or on the membrane, and we predict how stochastic but localized dephosphorylation of membrane lipids can drive lattice disassembly. The NERDSS simulations reveal the spatial constraints on lattice growth and the role of membrane localization and cooperativity in nucleating assembly. By modeling viral lattice assembly and recapitulating oscillations in protein expression levels for a circadian clock model, we illustrate the adaptability of NERDSS. NERDSS simulates user-defined assembly models that were previously inaccessible to existing software tools, with broad applications to predicting self-assembly in vivo and designing high-yield assemblies in vitro.

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