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Applying dimorphic yeasts as model organisms to study mycelial growth: part 2. Use of mathematical simulations to identify different construction principles in yeast colonies
Authors:Thomas Walther   Holger Reinsch   Kai Ostermann   Andreas Deutsch  Thomas Bley
Affiliation:(1) Institute of Food Technology and Bioprocess Engineering, Technical University Dresden, 01062 Dresden, Germany;(2) Institute of Genetics, Technical University Dresden, 01062 Dresden, Germany;(3) Center for Information Services and High Performance Computing, Technical University Dresden, 01062 Dresden, Germany;(4) Present address: Laboratoire d’Ing?nierie des Syst?mes Biologiques et des Proc?d?s, UMR INSA/CNRS 5504, UMR INSA/INRA 792, Institut National des Sciences Appliqu?es (INSA), 135 Avenue de Rangueil, 31077 Toulouse Cedex 04, France
Abstract:The dimorphic yeasts Candida boidinii and Yarrowia lipolytica were applied as model organisms to study mycelial growth. A mathematical model of hybrid cellular automaton type was developed to analyze the impact of different biological assumptions on the predicted development of filamentous yeast colonies. The one-dimensional model described discrete cells and continuous distribution of nutrients. The simulation algorithm accounted for proliferation of cells, diffusion of nutrient, as well as biomass decay and recycling inside the mycelium. Simulations reproduced the spatio-temporal development of C. boidinii colonies when a diffusion-limited growth algorithm based on the growth of pseudohyphal cells was applied. Development of Y. lipolytica colonies could only be reproduced when proliferation was restricted to the colony boundary, and cell decay and biomass recycling were incorporated into the model. The results suggested that cytoplasm, which served as the secondary nutrient resource, had to be translocated inside the hyphal network.
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