

Preprint 118/2005
Global existence results for complex hyperbolic models of bacterial chemotaxis
Radek Erban and Hyung Ju Hwang
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Submission date: 12. Dec. 2005
Pages: 22
published in: Discrete and continuous dynamical systems / B, 6 (2006) 6, p. 1239-1260
DOI number (of the published article): 10.3934/dcdsb.2006.6.1239
Bibtex
Keywords and phrases: chemotaxis, intracellular transduction, global existence
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Abstract:
Bacteria are able to respond to environmental signals by changing their
rules of movement. When we take into account chemical signals in the
environment, this behaviour is often called chemotaxis. At the
individual-level, chemotaxis consists of several steps. First, the cell
detects the extracellular signal using receptors on its membrane. Then, the
cell processes the signal information through the intracellular signal
transduction network, and finally it responds by altering its motile
behaviour accordingly. At the population level, chemotaxis can lead to
aggregation of bacteria, travelling waves or pattern formation, and the
important task is to explain the population-level behaviour in terms of
individual-based models. It has been previously shown that the transport
equation framework is suitable for
connecting different levels of modelling of bacterial chemotaxis. In this
paper, we couple the transport equation for bacteria with the
(parabolic/elliptic) equation for the extracellular signals. We prove global
existence of solutions for the general hyperbolic chemotaxis models of cells
which process the information about the extracellular signal through the
intracellular biochemical network and interact by altering the extracellular
signal as well. The conditions for global existence in terms of the
properties of the signal transduction model are given.