Multi-scale modelling of the dynamics of cell colonies: insights into cell-adhesion forces and cancer invasion from in silico simulations
Authored by Daniela K Schlueter, Ignacio Ramis-Conde, Mark A J Chaplain
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2014.1080
Sponsors:
European Research Council (ERC)
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Studying the biophysical interactions between cells is crucial to
understanding how normal tissue develops, how it is structured and also
when malfunctions occur. Traditional experiments try to infer events at
the tissue level after observing the behaviour of and interactions
between individual cells. This approach assumes that cells behave in the
same biophysical manner in isolated experiments as they do within
colonies and tissues. In this paper, we develop a multi-scale
multi-compartment mathematical model that accounts for the principal
biophysical interactions and adhesion pathways not only at a cell-cell
level but also at the level of cell colonies (in contrast to the
traditional approach). Our results suggest that adhesion/separation
forces between cells may be lower in cell colonies than traditional
isolated single-cell experiments infer. As a consequence, isolated
single-cell experiments may be insufficient to deduce important
biological processes such as single-cell invasion after detachment from
a solid tumour. The simulations further show that kinetic rates and cell
biophysical characteristics such as pressure-related cell-cycle arrest
have a major influence on cell colony patterns and can allow for the
development of protrusive cellular structures as seen in invasive cancer
cell lines independent of expression levels of pro-invasion molecules.
Tags
morphogenesis
Tumor-growth
Complex
E-cadherin
Vitro