“…The proposed abortive k-TASEP model is a special case of an inhomogeneous k-TASEP model with only one slow site located at the first site of the lattice. The inhomogeneous TASEP model has attracted significant interest in recent years, and some important analytical and numerical results have been obtained for point particles (see Cook et al, 2013, Poker et al, 2015, Dhiman and Gupta, 2016, Xiao et al, 2016, as well as for extended particles Shaw et al (2003Shaw et al ( , 2004b, Dong et al (2007), Klumpp and Hwa (2008), Dong et al (2009), Zia et al (2011), Brackley et al (2011). The standard way to treat a problem with an individual slow site like ours would consist in using mean-field approximations for the sublattices to the left and to the right of the slow site and stitching the two solutions together by the flux conservation equation on the slow site Kolomeisky (1998), Shaw et al (2004a).…”