Author
Taylor-King, J
Baratchart, E
Dhawan, A
Coker, E
Rye, I
Russnes, H
Chapman, S
Basanta, D
Marusyk, A
Journal title
Mathematical Medicine and Biology
DOI
10.1093/imammb/dqx022
Issue
1
Volume
36
Last updated
2024-04-11T06:14:34.17+01:00
Page
93-112
Abstract
Intra-tumour phenotypic heterogeneity limits accuracy of clinical diagnostics and hampers the efficiency of anti-cancer therapies. Dealing with this cellular heterogeneity requires adequate understanding of its sources, which is extremely difficult, as phenotypes of tumour cells integrate hardwired (epi)mutational differences with the dynamic responses to microenvironmental cues. The later come in form of both direct physical interactions, as well as inputs from gradients of secreted signalling molecules. Furthermore, tumour cells can not only receive microenvironmental cues, but also produce them. Despite high biological and clinical importance of understanding spatial aspects of paracrine signaling, adequate research tools are largely lacking. Here, a partial differential equation (PDE) based mathematical model is developed that mimics the process of cell ablation. This model suggests how each cell might contribute to the microenvironment by either absorbing or secreting diffusible factors, and quantifies the extent to which observed intensities can be explained via diffusion mediated signalling. The model allows for the separation of phenotypic responses to signalling gradients within tumour microenvironments from the combined influence of responses mediated by direct physical contact and hardwired (epi)genetic differences. The method is applied to a multi-channel immunofluorescence in situ hybridization (iFISH) stained breast cancer histological specimen and correlations are investigated between: HER2 gene amplification; HER2 protein expression; and cell interaction with the diffusible microenvironment. This approach allows partial deconvolution of the complex inputs that shape phenotypic heterogeneity of tumour cells, and identifies cells that significantly impact gradients of signalling molecules.
Symplectic ID
820630
Favourite
Off
Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
14 Feb 2018
Please contact us with feedback and comments about this page. Created on 19 Jan 2018 - 14:23.