| Literature DB >> 28766157 |
Ryan M Evans1, David A Edwards2.
Abstract
Optical biosensors are often used to measure kinetic rate constants associated with chemical reactions. Such instruments operate in the surface-volume configuration, in which ligand molecules are convected through a fluid-filled volume over a surface to which receptors are confined. Currently, scientists are using optical biosensors to measure the kinetic rate constants associated with DNA translesion synthesis-a process critical to DNA damage repair. Biosensor experiments to study this process involve multiple interacting components on the sensor surface. This multiple-component biosensor experiment is modeled with a set of nonlinear integrodifferential equations (IDEs). It is shown that in physically relevant asymptotic limits these equations reduce to a much simpler set of ordinary differential equations (ODEs). To verify the validity of our ODE approximation, a numerical method for the IDE system is developed and studied. Results from the ODE model agree with simulations of the IDE model, rendering our ODE model useful for parameter estimation.Entities:
Keywords: Biochemistry; Integrodifferential equations; Numerical methods; Optical biosensors; Rate constants
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28766157 DOI: 10.1007/s11538-017-0327-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull Math Biol ISSN: 0092-8240 Impact factor: 1.758