The evolution of carrying capacity in constrained and expanding tumour cell populations
Authored by Philip Gerlee, Alexander R A Anderson
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1088/1478-3975/12/5/056001
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Abstract
Cancer cells are known to modify their micro-environment such that it
can sustain a larger population, or, in ecological terms, they construct
a niche which increases the carrying capacity of the population. It has
however been argued that niche construction, which benefits all cells in
the tumour, would be selected against since cheaters could reap the
benefits without paying the cost. We have investigated the impact of
niche specificity on tumour evolution using an individual based model of
breast tumour growth, in which the carrying capacity of each cell
consists of two components: an intrinsic, subclone-specific part and a
contribution from all neighbouring cells. Analysis of the model shows
that the ability of a mutant to invade a resident population depends
strongly on the specificity. When specificity is low selection is mostly
on growth rate, while high specificity shifts selection towards
increased carrying capacity. Further, we show that the long-term
evolution of the system can be predicted using adaptive dynamics. By
comparing the results from a spatially structured versus well-mixed
population we show that spatial structure restores selection for
carrying capacity even at zero specificity, which poses a solution to
the niche construction dilemma. Lastly, we show that an expanding
population exhibits spatially variable selection pressure, where cells
at the leading edge exhibit higher growth rate and lower carrying
capacity than those at the centre of the tumour.
Tags
Diversity
cancer
ecology
niche construction
Natural selection
Intratumor heterogeneity