Algebraic and Diagrammatic Methods for the Rule-Based Modeling of Multiparticle Complexes
Abstract
The formation, dissolution, and dynamics of multiparticle complexes is of fundamental interest in the study of stochastic chemical systems. In 1976, Masao Doi introduced a Fock space formalism for modeling classical particles. Doi's formalism, however, does not support the assembly of multiple particles into complexes. Starting in the 2000s, multiple groups developed rule-based methods for computationally simulating biochemical systems involving large macromolecular complexes. However, these methods are based on graph-rewriting rules and/or process algebras that are mathematically disconnected from the statistical physics methods generally used to analyze equilibrium and nonequilibrium systems. Here we bridge these two approaches by introducing an operator algebra for the rule-based modeling of multiparticle complexes. Our formalism is based on a Fock space that supports not only the creation and annihilation of classical particles but also the assembly of multiple particles into complexes, as well as the disassembly of complexes into their components. Rules are specified by algebraic operators that act on particles through a manifestation of Wick's theorem. We further describe diagrammatic methods that facilitate rule specification and analytic calculations. We demonstrate our formalism on systems in and out of thermal equilibrium, and for nonequilibrium systems we present a stochastic simulation algorithm based on this formalism. The results provide a unified approach to the mathematical and computational study of stochastic chemical systems in which multiparticle complexes play an important role.
Copyright and License
Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI.
Acknowledgement
We thank Rob Phillips for his support and encouragement throughout this project, as well as Muir Morrison for his early work with J.B.K. on this topic. R.J.R. further thanks Sergei Gukov and Alexei Kitaev for helpful discussions. The work of J.B.K. was supported by NIH Grants No. GM133777 and No. HG011787. The work of R.J.R. was supported by NIH Grant No. GM118043. This research was performed in part at the Aspen Center for Physics, which is supported by National Science Foundation Grant No. PHY-2210452.
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Additional details
- National Institutes of Health
- GM133777
- National Institutes of Health
- HG011787
- National Institutes of Health
- GM118043
- National Science Foundation
- PHY-2210452
- Accepted
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2025-04-08
- Caltech groups
- Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy (PMA)
- Publication Status
- Published