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Challenging the robustness of simulated protocells (Abstract)

Challenging the robustness of simulated protocells (Abstract)
Challenging the robustness of simulated protocells (Abstract)
We have re-implemented and extended the 2D artificial chemistry model of Ono and Ikegami (2001) (see also Ono, 2005) to increase its behavioural diversity. In its original form, this cellular automata (CA) simulation of primitive chemical life produces self-organising, autopoietic protocells from a random initial configuration of membrane, catalyst, resource, waste, and water particles. These particles are free to diffuse across the CA lattice, rotate (in the case of membrane particles) and undergo chemical reactions. The system is updated stochastically, but the transitions are biased according to local potential energy gradients. These energies are specified by pre-defined repulsive interactions, which depend on the types of the interacting particles and their relative positions and orientations. All interactions are short-ranged (one lattice spacing or less). The chemistry of the system is autocatalytic, i.e., the catalyst particles stimulate their own replication (a catalyst resource particle and a catalyst particle react to form two catalyst particles). The catalyst particles also stimulate the production of membrane particles from their own resource particles. All particles spontaneously decay into wastes, which are recycled at a constant rate by an external energy source. In certain regions of the system's parameter space it will evolve towards a configuration possessing long-range order, expressed by the clustering of membrane particles, which eventually form closed boundaries. If a sufficient number of catalyst particles are confined within a membrane loop, membrane decay can be compensated by membrane synthesis due to the presence of the catalyst particles (figure 1(c)). These protocells are capable of maintaining their own boundaries, the defining property of an autopoietic entity. Our extension of the model consisted of introducing a new particle, B, with identical characteristics to the catalyst particle except that rather than stimulating the production of membranes, it stimulates their decay. At low initial concentrations, the new particle has little effect on the formation and proliferation of protocells (figure 1(f)). However, when initialised at the same concentration as the membrane-producing catalyst, the new particle inhibits protocell formation (figure 1(h)). Only a small number of cells are able to form and the characteristic time required for the emergence of the protocells is much longer than simulations run in the absence of the B-particles. However, once membranes form and aggregate, the new particle takes advantage of the fact that membranes are almost impermeable to catalyst particles. If a cloud of B-particles is bordered by one or more membranes, it is much less likely that they will diffuse away since they will be sheltered from the dispersive effects of diffusion. This protection enables an increase in the density of B-particles, which then leads to a stronger decay rate of local membrane particles (figure 1(i)). Thus, if a sufficiently dense cloud of B-particles arises near to a cluster of protocells, it is able to increase in concentration such that protocells and sometimes even whole clusters of protocells are destroyed or segregated. This behaviour is reminiscent of a primitive pursuit-evasion scenario with protocells being forced to grow in the direction of low B-particle density.
Bartlett, Stuart
d6942368-4dbc-4111-bce0-1867f4c60a89
Attard, George
8b9e5e80-2b4c-4718-8303-57bb93caf045
Bullock, Seth
2ad576e4-56b8-4f31-84e0-51bd0b7a1cd3
Bartlett, Stuart
d6942368-4dbc-4111-bce0-1867f4c60a89
Attard, George
8b9e5e80-2b4c-4718-8303-57bb93caf045
Bullock, Seth
2ad576e4-56b8-4f31-84e0-51bd0b7a1cd3

Bartlett, Stuart, Attard, George and Bullock, Seth (2010) Challenging the robustness of simulated protocells (Abstract). Artificial Life XII: Twelfth International Conference on the Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems, Odense, Denmark. 19 - 23 Aug 2010.

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Poster)

Abstract

We have re-implemented and extended the 2D artificial chemistry model of Ono and Ikegami (2001) (see also Ono, 2005) to increase its behavioural diversity. In its original form, this cellular automata (CA) simulation of primitive chemical life produces self-organising, autopoietic protocells from a random initial configuration of membrane, catalyst, resource, waste, and water particles. These particles are free to diffuse across the CA lattice, rotate (in the case of membrane particles) and undergo chemical reactions. The system is updated stochastically, but the transitions are biased according to local potential energy gradients. These energies are specified by pre-defined repulsive interactions, which depend on the types of the interacting particles and their relative positions and orientations. All interactions are short-ranged (one lattice spacing or less). The chemistry of the system is autocatalytic, i.e., the catalyst particles stimulate their own replication (a catalyst resource particle and a catalyst particle react to form two catalyst particles). The catalyst particles also stimulate the production of membrane particles from their own resource particles. All particles spontaneously decay into wastes, which are recycled at a constant rate by an external energy source. In certain regions of the system's parameter space it will evolve towards a configuration possessing long-range order, expressed by the clustering of membrane particles, which eventually form closed boundaries. If a sufficient number of catalyst particles are confined within a membrane loop, membrane decay can be compensated by membrane synthesis due to the presence of the catalyst particles (figure 1(c)). These protocells are capable of maintaining their own boundaries, the defining property of an autopoietic entity. Our extension of the model consisted of introducing a new particle, B, with identical characteristics to the catalyst particle except that rather than stimulating the production of membranes, it stimulates their decay. At low initial concentrations, the new particle has little effect on the formation and proliferation of protocells (figure 1(f)). However, when initialised at the same concentration as the membrane-producing catalyst, the new particle inhibits protocell formation (figure 1(h)). Only a small number of cells are able to form and the characteristic time required for the emergence of the protocells is much longer than simulations run in the absence of the B-particles. However, once membranes form and aggregate, the new particle takes advantage of the fact that membranes are almost impermeable to catalyst particles. If a cloud of B-particles is bordered by one or more membranes, it is much less likely that they will diffuse away since they will be sheltered from the dispersive effects of diffusion. This protection enables an increase in the density of B-particles, which then leads to a stronger decay rate of local membrane particles (figure 1(i)). Thus, if a sufficiently dense cloud of B-particles arises near to a cluster of protocells, it is able to increase in concentration such that protocells and sometimes even whole clusters of protocells are destroyed or segregated. This behaviour is reminiscent of a primitive pursuit-evasion scenario with protocells being forced to grow in the direction of low B-particle density.

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More information

Published date: 2010
Additional Information: Event Dates: 19-23 August, 2010
Venue - Dates: Artificial Life XII: Twelfth International Conference on the Synthesis and Simulation of Living Systems, Odense, Denmark, 2010-08-19 - 2010-08-23
Organisations: Agents, Interactions & Complexity

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Local EPrints ID: 271483
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/271483
PURE UUID: d2058eac-d16b-4f23-b72a-b93835b9da63

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Date deposited: 15 Aug 2010 10:19
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 09:32

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Contributors

Author: Stuart Bartlett
Author: George Attard
Author: Seth Bullock

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