February 2, 2026
Journal Article
Three-dimensional Modeling of Hyphal Fusion, Branching, and Nutrient Transport in Filamentous Fungi
Abstract
Fungi exhibit behaviors distinct from other microbes. Filamentous fungi grow by extending complex networks of branched filaments collectively referred to as the mycelium. These networks can expand over large distances and traverse low-nutrient areas by translocating nutrients through the filament network. This spatial characteristic makes filamentous fungi crucial for soil ecosystems, supporting stable microbial communities and promoting plant growth. However, simulating these behaviors is complex. The elongated nature of fungal compartments results in different mechanical interactions compared to the commonly modeled spherical bacteria. These detailed hyphal mechanics require specialized consideration and are often excluded from conventional fungal simulation packages. Additionally, the extensive fungal networks in nature demand computationally intensive simulations, necessitating high-performance algorithms. Therefore, realistic fungi simulations require a specialized software. We introduce a fungal modeling expansion to the high-performance BMX software suite. BMX leverages adaptive mesh refinement in AMReX for chemical diffusion and incorporates a full mechanical model for bacterial cells, accelerated by GPUs. By extending BMX to model filamentous particles, we demonstrate the formation of complex filament networks through interactions like hyphal branching and fusion (anastomosis). We show that the networks produced match real-world fungal structures through various metrics. This work supports computational studies of fungal growth dynamics and can be adapted to investigate the growth of other filamentous structures in biology or materials science. The expanded-BMX package is open-sourced and is available from \hl{TBD} under the BSD-2-Clause licence.Published: February 2, 2026