A Multiscale Computational Model of Chemotactic Axon Guidance

A Multiscale Computational Model of Chemotactic Axon Guidance

Giacomo Aletti, Paola Causin, Giovanni Naldi, Matteo Semplice
ISBN13: 9781609604912|ISBN10: 1609604911|EISBN13: 9781609604929
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60960-491-2.ch028
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MLA

Aletti, Giacomo, et al. "A Multiscale Computational Model of Chemotactic Axon Guidance." Handbook of Research on Computational and Systems Biology: Interdisciplinary Applications, edited by Limin Angela Liu, et al., IGI Global, 2011, pp. 628-645. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60960-491-2.ch028

APA

Aletti, G., Causin, P., Naldi, G., & Semplice, M. (2011). A Multiscale Computational Model of Chemotactic Axon Guidance. In L. Liu, D. Wei, Y. Li, & H. Lei (Eds.), Handbook of Research on Computational and Systems Biology: Interdisciplinary Applications (pp. 628-645). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60960-491-2.ch028

Chicago

Aletti, Giacomo, et al. "A Multiscale Computational Model of Chemotactic Axon Guidance." In Handbook of Research on Computational and Systems Biology: Interdisciplinary Applications, edited by Limin Angela Liu, et al., 628-645. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2011. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60960-491-2.ch028

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Abstract

In the development of the nervous system, the migration of neurons driven by chemotactic cues has been known since a long time to play a key role. In this mechanism, the axonal projections of neurons detect very small differences in extracellular ligand concentration across the tiny section of their distal part, the growth cone. The internal transduction of the signal performed by the growth cone leads to cytoskeleton rearrangement and biased cell motility. A mathematical model of neuron migration provides hints of the nature of this process, which is only partially known to biologists and is characterized by a complex coupling of microscopic and macroscopic phenomena. This chapter focuses on the tight connection between growth cone directional sensing as the result of the information collected by several transmembrane receptors, a microscopic phenomenon, and its motility, a macroscopic outcome. The biophysical hypothesis investigated is the role played by the biased re-localization of ligand-bound receptors on the membrane, actively convected by growing microtubules. The results of the numerical simulations quantify the positive feedback exerted by the receptor redistribution, assessing its importance in the neural guidance mechanism.

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