OrganL: Dynamic Triangulation of Biomembranes using Curved Elements

Biophys J. 2024 May 3:S0006-3495(24)00290-X. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2024.04.028. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

We describe a method for simulating biomembranes of arbitrary shape. In contrast to other dynamically triangulated surface (DTS) algorithms, our method provides a rich, quasi tangent-continuous, yet local description of the surface. We use curved Nagata triangles, which we generalize to cubic order to achieve the requisite flexibility. The resulting interpolation can be constructed locally without iterations, at the cost of having only approximate tangent continuity away from the vertices. This allows us to provide a parallelized and fine-tuned Monte Carlo implementation. As a first example of the potential benefits of the enhanced description, our method supports inhomogeneous lipid distributions as well as lipid mixing. It also supports restraints and constraints of various types and is constructed to be as easily extensible as possible. We validate the approach by testing its numerical accuracy, followed by reproducing the known Helfrich solutions for shapes with rotational symmetry. Finally, we present some example applications, including curvature-driven demixing and stylized effects of proteins. Input files for these examples, as well as the implementation itself, are freely available for researchers under the name OrganL.