Abstract
AbstractExtreme mutation rates in microbes and cancer cells can result in error-induced extinction (EEX), where every descendant cell eventually acquires a lethal mutation. In this work, we investigate critical birth–death processes with n distinct types as a birth–death model of EEX in a growing population. Each type-i cell divides independently $$(i)\rightarrow (i)+(i)$$
(
i
)
→
(
i
)
+
(
i
)
or mutates $$(i)\rightarrow (i+1)$$
(
i
)
→
(
i
+
1
)
at the same rate. The total number of cells grows exponentially as a Yule process until a cell of type-n appears, which cell type can only divide or die at rate one. This makes the whole process critical and hence after the exponentially growing phase eventually all cells die with probability one. We present large-time asymptotic results for the general n-type critical birth–death process. We find that the mass function of the number of cells of type-k has algebraic and stationary tail $$(\text {size})^{-1-\chi _k}$$
(
size
)
-
1
-
χ
k
, with $$\chi _k=2^{1-k}$$
χ
k
=
2
1
-
k
, for $$k=2,\dots ,n$$
k
=
2
,
⋯
,
n
, in sharp contrast to the exponential tail of the first type. The same exponents describe the tail of the asymptotic survival probability $$(\text {time})^{-\xi _k}$$
(
time
)
-
ξ
k
. We present applications of the results for studying extinction due to intolerable mutation rates in biological populations.
Funder
Centre for Doctoral Training in Mathematical Modelling, Analysis and Computation, University of Edinburgh
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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