6533b831fe1ef96bd1298710

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Immune networks: multitasking capabilities near saturation

Alessia AnnibaleElena AgliariDaniele TantariAdriano BarraAnthony C. C. Coolen

subject

Statistics and ProbabilityImmune Network Statistical Mechanics Hopfield Model Parallel RetrievalQuantitative Biology::Tissues and OrgansPhase (waves)FOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyInterference (wave propagation)TopologyQuantitative Biology::Cell BehaviorCell Behavior (q-bio.CB)Physics - Biological PhysicsFinite setMathematical PhysicsConnectivityAssociative propertyPhysicsDegree (graph theory)ReplicaStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsGraph theoryDisordered Systems and Neural Networks (cond-mat.dis-nn)Condensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural NetworksBiological Physics (physics.bio-ph)FOS: Biological sciencesModeling and SimulationQuantitative Biology - Cell Behavior

description

Pattern-diluted associative networks were introduced recently as models for the immune system, with nodes representing T-lymphocytes and stored patterns representing signalling protocols between T- and B-lymphocytes. It was shown earlier that in the regime of extreme pattern dilution, a system with $N_T$ T-lymphocytes can manage a number $N_B!=!\order(N_T^\delta)$ of B-lymphocytes simultaneously, with $\delta!<!1$. Here we study this model in the extensive load regime $N_B!=!\alpha N_T$, with also a high degree of pattern dilution, in agreement with immunological findings. We use graph theory and statistical mechanical analysis based on replica methods to show that in the finite-connectivity regime, where each T-lymphocyte interacts with a finite number of B-lymphocytes as $N_T\to\infty$, the T-lymphocytes can coordinate effective immune responses to an extensive number of distinct antigen invasions in parallel. As $\alpha$ increases, the system eventually undergoes a second order transition to a phase with clonal cross-talk interference, where the system's performance degrades gracefully. Mathematically, the model is equivalent to a spin system on a finitely connected graph with many short loops, so one would expect the available analytical methods, which all assume locally tree-like graphs, to fail. Yet it turns out to be solvable. Our results are supported by numerical simulations.

https://doi.org/10.1088/1751-8113/46/41/415003