Evolving homeostatic tissue using genetic algorithms
Authored by Philip Gerlee, Alexander R A Anderson, David Basanta
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2011.03.004
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Multicellular organisms maintain form and function through a multitude
of homeostatic mechanisms. The details of these mechanisms are in many
cases unknown, and so are their evolutionary origin and their link to
development. In order to illuminate these issues we have investigated
the evolution of structural homeostasis in the simplest of cases, a
tissue formed by a mono-layer of cells. To this end, we made use of a
3-dimensional hybrid cellular automaton, an individual-based model in
which the behaviour of each cell depends on its local environment. Using
an evolutionary algorithm (EA) we evolved cell signalling networks, both
with a fixed and an incremental fitness evaluation, which give rise to
and maintain a mono-layer tissue structure. Analysis of the solutions
provided by the EA shows that the two evaluation methods gives rise to
different types of solutions to the problem of homeostasis. The fixed
method leads to almost optimal solutions, where the tissue relies on a
high rate of cell turnover, while the solutions from the incremental
scheme behave in a more conservative manner, only dividing when
necessary. In order to test the robustness of the solutions we subjected
them to environmental stress, by wounding the tissue, and to genetic
stress, by introducing mutations. The results show that the robustness
very much depends on the mechanism responsible for maintaining
homeostasis. The two evolved cell types analysed present contrasting
mechanisms by which tissue homeostasis can be maintained. This compares
well to different tissue types found in multicellular organisms. For
example the epithelial cells lining the colon in humans are shed at a
considerable rate, while in other tissue types, which are not as
exposed, the conservative type of homeostatic mechanism is normally
found. These results will hopefully shed light on how multicellular
organisms have evolved homeostatic mechanisms and what might occur when
these mechanisms fail, as in the case of cancer. (C) 2011 Published by
Elsevier Ltd.
Tags
Evolution
cancer
Model
robustness
Tumor-growth
Rates
Cells
Epithelial acini
Adhesion