The National Resource for Cell Analysis and Modeling is housed within, and is the principal venture of, the Center for Biomedical Imaging Technology (CBIT) at the University of Connecticut Health Center. The Resource contains state of the art facilities for studying living cells and has developed a new technology, the Virtual Cell, for analyzing and synthesizing this knowledge. The Virtual Cell is a general framework for modeling cell biological processes. It approaches the problem by associating biochemical and electrophysiological data describing individual reactions with experimental microscopic image data describing their cellular locations. Individual processes are integrated within a physical and computational infrastructure that will accommodate any molecular mechanism. That this computational technology is being developed within a research center fully equipped for microscopic studies of living cells assures that experiment and theory drive each other synergistically. The research plan for the technology development is divided into two projects centered on theory and three that are primarily experimental. Computational Infrastructure addresses the issues of layering the cell biological models on a transparent physical and mathematical foundation, implementing the numerical methods in a distributed computing environment; and refining the remotely accessible user interface and associated database of images and reaction mechanisms. Mathematical and Physical Analysis of Cell Biological Processes has 3 goals: formulation of generalized mathematical descriptions of the elementary physical processes underlying the myriad of cell biological mechanisms; development and validation of efficient numerical methods; and development of rigorous methods for building and refining models from experimental data. Calcium Dynamics aims to elucidate intracellular calcium signaling in cells via a systematic marriage of experiment and modeling approaches;

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Research Resources (NCRR)
Type
Biotechnology Resource Grants (P41)
Project #
5P41RR013186-08
Application #
7182561
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-CDF-2 (01))
Project Start
2005-09-01
Project End
2006-08-31
Budget Start
2005-09-01
Budget End
2006-08-31
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
2005
Total Cost
$10,460
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Connecticut
Department
Anatomy/Cell Biology
Type
Schools of Dentistry
DUNS #
022254226
City
Farmington
State
CT
Country
United States
Zip Code
06030
Ron, Amit; Azeloglu, Evren U; Calizo, Rhodora C et al. (2017) Cell shape information is transduced through tension-independent mechanisms. Nat Commun 8:2145
Schaff, James C; Gao, Fei; Li, Ye et al. (2016) Numerical Approach to Spatial Deterministic-Stochastic Models Arising in Cell Biology. PLoS Comput Biol 12:e1005236
Semenova, Irina; Ikeda, Kazuho; Resaul, Karim et al. (2014) Regulation of microtubule-based transport by MAP4. Mol Biol Cell 25:3119-32
Novak, Igor L; Slepchenko, Boris M (2014) A conservative algorithm for parabolic problems in domains with moving boundaries. J Comput Phys 270:203-213
Michalski, Paul J (2014) First demonstration of bistability in CaMKII, a memory-related kinase. Biophys J 106:1233-5
Azeloglu, Evren U; Hardy, Simon V; Eungdamrong, Narat John et al. (2014) Interconnected network motifs control podocyte morphology and kidney function. Sci Signal 7:ra12
Dickson, Eamonn J; Falkenburger, Björn H; Hille, Bertil (2013) Quantitative properties and receptor reserve of the IP(3) and calcium branch of G(q)-coupled receptor signaling. J Gen Physiol 141:521-35
Michalski, P J (2013) The delicate bistability of CaMKII. Biophys J 105:794-806
Falkenburger, Björn H; Dickson, Eamonn J; Hille, Bertil (2013) Quantitative properties and receptor reserve of the DAG and PKC branch of G(q)-coupled receptor signaling. J Gen Physiol 141:537-55
Ditlev, Jonathon A; Mayer, Bruce J; Loew, Leslie M (2013) There is more than one way to model an elephant. Experiment-driven modeling of the actin cytoskeleton. Biophys J 104:520-32

Showing the most recent 10 out of 117 publications