Lehrinhalte
The course covers mathematical methods used in the area of systems and synthetic biology. On the one hand it deals with practical modeling of molecular processes but also with theoretical investigations that reveal general properties of those processes. The course follows a microscopic approach and introduces those processes using probabilistic methods. For that, necessary prerequists are recapitulated, such as definition of Markov processes in different spaces and their properties. With this background, the dynamics of stochastic reaction kinetics in terms of population models is investigated. Limiting cases are introduced, such as the diffusion approximation or the deterministic approximation (fluid approximations) of those systems. Often methods from statistical physics are applied. Numerical methods for solving the corresponding Fokker-Planck and Master equations are discussed. For the limiting case of a deterministic approximation, traditional methods for the stability analysis of nonlinear differential equations are introduced and methods are discussed that just rely on the topology of the reaction network to determine stability properties. In this context, a derivation of the moment dynamics and approximation methods based on moment closure are given. Connections to queueing theory models are shown.
Furthermore, the question is addressed of how the introduced dynamical models are calibrated to data from molecular biology. For that, general methods of statistical inference from statistics and of machine learning from computer science are discussed and specialized algorithms for the considered system class are presented. Additionally, a short introduction to the theory of nonlinear optimal filtering is given and special cases such as hidden Markov models are discussed.
Beyond reaction kinetics, the course provides a basic introduction to the modeling and numerical methods used in molecular dynamics. Newtonian multi-body simulations and classical potentials and their use in molecular dynamics are discussed. Most of the topics in this course are introduced through practical examples from applied modeling in the domain of systems biology. The applicability of the respective methods in synthetic biology is highlighted.
Literature
[url]http://www.bcs.tu-darmstadt.de/[/url]
Voraussetzungen
Basic knowledge of programming, Matlab.
The course covers mathematical methods used in the area of systems and synthetic biology. On the one hand it deals with practical modeling of molecular processes but also with theoretical investigations that reveal general properties of those processes. The course follows a microscopic approach and introduces those processes using probabilistic methods. For that, necessary prerequists are recapitulated, such as definition of Markov processes in different spaces and their properties. With this background, the dynamics of stochastic reaction kinetics in terms of population models is investigated. Limiting cases are introduced, such as the diffusion approximation or the deterministic approximation (fluid approximations) of those systems. Often methods from statistical physics are applied. Numerical methods for solving the corresponding Fokker-Planck and Master equations are discussed. For the limiting case of a deterministic approximation, traditional methods for the stability analysis of nonlinear differential equations are introduced and methods are discussed that just rely on the topology of the reaction network to determine stability properties. In this context, a derivation of the moment dynamics and approximation methods based on moment closure are given. Connections to queueing theory models are shown.
Furthermore, the question is addressed of how the introduced dynamical models are calibrated to data from molecular biology. For that, general methods of statistical inference from statistics and of machine learning from computer science are discussed and specialized algorithms for the considered system class are presented. Additionally, a short introduction to the theory of nonlinear optimal filtering is given and special cases such as hidden Markov models are discussed.
Beyond reaction kinetics, the course provides a basic introduction to the modeling and numerical methods used in molecular dynamics. Newtonian multi-body simulations and classical potentials and their use in molecular dynamics are discussed. Most of the topics in this course are introduced through practical examples from applied modeling in the domain of systems biology. The applicability of the respective methods in synthetic biology is highlighted.
Literature
[url]http://www.bcs.tu-darmstadt.de/[/url]
Voraussetzungen
Basic knowledge of programming, Matlab.
- Lehrende: Heinz Köppl
- Lehrende: Sofia Startceva
- Lehrende: Gelöschter User (TU-ID gelöscht)
Semester: Verão 2021