A Krylov-based finite state projection algorithm for solving the chemical master equation arising in the discrete modelling of biological systems
Contribuinte(s) |
Langville, A. N. Stewart, W. J. |
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Data(s) |
2006
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Resumo |
Biochemical reactions underlying genetic regulation are often modelled as a continuous-time, discrete-state, Markov process, and the evolution of the associated probability density is described by the so-called chemical master equation (CME). However the CME is typically difficult to solve, since the state-space involved can be very large or even countably infinite. Recently a finite state projection method (FSP) that truncates the state-space was suggested and shown to be effective in an example of a model of the Pap-pili epigenetic switch. However in this example, both the model and the final time at which the solution was computed, were relatively small. Presented here is a Krylov FSP algorithm based on a combination of state-space truncation and inexact matrix-vector product routines. This allows larger-scale models to be studied and solutions for larger final times to be computed in a realistic execution time. Additionally the new method computes the solution at intermediate times at virtually no extra cost, since it is derived from Krylov-type methods for computing matrix exponentials. For the purpose of comparison the new algorithm is applied to the model of the Pap-pili epigenetic switch, where the original FSP was first demonstrated. Also the method is applied to a more sophisticated model of regulated transcription. Numerical results indicate that the new approach is significantly faster and extendable to larger biological models. |
Identificador | |
Publicador |
Boston Books |
Relação |
Burrage, Kevin, Hegland, M., Macnamara, Shev, & Sidje, Roger (2006) A Krylov-based finite state projection algorithm for solving the chemical master equation arising in the discrete modelling of biological systems. In Langville, A. N. & Stewart, W. J. (Eds.) Proceedings of the Markov 150th Anniversary Conference, Boston Books, Charleston, South Carolina, pp. 21-38. |
Fonte |
Faculty of Science and Technology; Mathematical Sciences |
Tipo |
Conference Paper |