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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 3840, 2024 May 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38714698

RESUMO

As the circadian clock regulates fundamental biological processes, disrupted clocks are often observed in patients and diseased tissues. Determining the circadian time of the patient or the tissue of focus is essential in circadian medicine and research. Here we present tauFisher, a computational pipeline that accurately predicts circadian time from a single transcriptomic sample by finding correlations between rhythmic genes within the sample. We demonstrate tauFisher's performance in adding timestamps to both bulk and single-cell transcriptomic samples collected from multiple tissue types and experimental settings. Application of tauFisher at a cell-type level in a single-cell RNAseq dataset collected from mouse dermal skin implies that greater circadian phase heterogeneity may explain the dampened rhythm of collective core clock gene expression in dermal immune cells compared to dermal fibroblasts. Given its robustness and generalizability across assay platforms, experimental setups, and tissue types, as well as its potential application in single-cell RNAseq data analysis, tauFisher is a promising tool that facilitates circadian medicine and research.


Assuntos
Relógios Circadianos , Ritmo Circadiano , Análise de Célula Única , Transcriptoma , Análise de Célula Única/métodos , Animais , Camundongos , Ritmo Circadiano/genética , Relógios Circadianos/genética , Humanos , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica/métodos , Biologia Computacional/métodos , Pele/metabolismo , Software , Fibroblastos/metabolismo , Análise de Sequência de RNA/métodos
2.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 20(4): e1011855, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38578817

RESUMO

The collective migration of keratinocytes during wound healing requires both the generation and transmission of mechanical forces for individual cellular locomotion and the coordination of movement across cells. Leader cells along the wound edge transmit mechanical and biochemical cues to ensuing follower cells, ensuring their coordinated direction of migration across multiple cells. Despite the observed importance of mechanical cues in leader cell formation and in controlling coordinated directionality of cell migration, the underlying biophysical mechanisms remain elusive. The mechanically-activated ion channel PIEZO1 was recently identified to play an inhibitory role during the reepithelialization of wounds. Here, through an integrative experimental and mathematical modeling approach, we elucidate PIEZO1's contributions to collective migration. Time-lapse microscopy reveals that PIEZO1 activity inhibits leader cell formation at the wound edge. To probe the relationship between PIEZO1 activity, leader cell formation and inhibition of reepithelialization, we developed an integrative 2D continuum model of wound closure that links observations at the single cell and collective cell migration scales. Through numerical simulations and subsequent experimental validation, we found that coordinated directionality plays a key role during wound closure and is inhibited by upregulated PIEZO1 activity. We propose that PIEZO1-mediated retraction suppresses leader cell formation which inhibits coordinated directionality between cells during collective migration.


Assuntos
Canais Iônicos , Queratinócitos , Movimento Celular/fisiologia
3.
ArXiv ; 2024 Jan 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38076515

RESUMO

Predicting the infiltration of Glioblastoma (GBM) from medical MRI scans is crucial for understanding tumor growth dynamics and designing personalized radiotherapy treatment plans.Mathematical models of GBM growth can complement the data in the prediction of spatial distributions of tumor cells. However, this requires estimating patient-specific parameters of the model from clinical data, which is a challenging inverse problem due to limited temporal data and the limited time between imaging and diagnosis. This work proposes a method that uses Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs) to estimate patient-specific parameters of a reaction-diffusion PDE model of GBM growth from a single 3D structural MRI snapshot. PINNs embed both the data and the PDE into a loss function, thus integrating theory and data. Key innovations include the identification and estimation of characteristic non-dimensional parameters, a pre-training step that utilizes the non-dimensional parameters and a fine-tuning step to determine the patient specific parameters. Additionally, the diffuse domain method is employed to handle the complex brain geometry within the PINN framework. Our method is validated both on synthetic and patient datasets, and shows promise for real-time parametric inference in the clinical setting for personalized GBM treatment.

4.
J Math Biol ; 86(6): 97, 2023 05 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37219647

RESUMO

We present a phase field model for vesicle growth or shrinkage induced by an osmotic pressure due to a chemical potential gradient. The model consists of an Allen-Cahn equation describing the evolution of the phase field parameter that describes the shape of the vesicle and a Cahn-Hilliard-type equation describing the evolution of the ionic fluid. We establish conditions for vesicle growth or shrinkage via a common tangent construction using free energy curves. During the membrane deformation, the model ensures total mass conservation of the ionic fluid, and we weakly enforce a surface area constraint of the vesicle. We develop a stable numerical scheme and an efficient nonlinear multigrid solver to evolve the phase and concentration fields, and we use this to evolve the fields to near equilibrium for 2D vesicles. Convergence tests confirm an [Formula: see text] accuracy for our scheme and near-optimal convergence for our multigrid solver. Numerical results reveal that the diffuse interface model captures the main features of cell shape dynamics: for a growing vesicle, there exist circle-like equilibrium shapes if the concentration difference across the membrane and the initial osmotic pressure are large enough; while for a shrinking vesicle, there exists a rich collection of finger-like equilibrium morphologies.


Assuntos
Forma Celular
5.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Nov 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37066246

RESUMO

As the circadian clock regulates fundamental biological processes, disrupted clocks are often observed in patients and diseased tissues. Determining the circadian time of the patient or the tissue of focus is essential in circadian medicine and research. Here we present tau-Fisher, a computational pipeline that accurately predicts circadian time from a single transcriptomic sample by finding correlations between rhythmic genes within the sample. We demonstrate tauFisher's out-standing performance in both bulk and single-cell transcriptomic data collected from multiple tissue types and experimental settings. Application of tauFisher at a cell-type level in a single-cell RNA-seq dataset collected from mouse dermal skin implies that greater circadian phase heterogeneity may explain the dampened rhythm of collective core clock gene expression in dermal immune cells compared to dermal fibroblasts. Given its robustness and generalizability across assay platforms, experimental setups, and tissue types, as well as its potential application in single-cell RNA-seq data analysis, tauFisher is a promising tool that facilitates circadian medicine and research.

6.
Elife ; 122023 04 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37115622

RESUMO

Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a blood cancer characterized by dysregulated production of maturing myeloid cells driven by the product of the Philadelphia chromosome, the BCR-ABL1 tyrosine kinase. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have proved effective in treating CML, but there is still a cohort of patients who do not respond to TKI therapy even in the absence of mutations in the BCR-ABL1 kinase domain that mediate drug resistance. To discover novel strategies to improve TKI therapy in CML, we developed a nonlinear mathematical model of CML hematopoiesis that incorporates feedback control and lineage branching. Cell-cell interactions were constrained using an automated model selection method together with previous observations and new in vivo data from a chimeric BCR-ABL1 transgenic mouse model of CML. The resulting quantitative model captures the dynamics of normal and CML cells at various stages of the disease and exhibits variable responses to TKI treatment, consistent with those of CML patients. The model predicts that an increase in the proportion of CML stem cells in the bone marrow would decrease the tendency of the disease to respond to TKI therapy, in concordance with clinical data and confirmed experimentally in mice. The model further suggests that, under our assumed similarities between normal and leukemic cells, a key predictor of refractory response to TKI treatment is an increased maximum probability of self-renewal of normal hematopoietic stem cells. We use these insights to develop a clinical prognostic criterion to predict the efficacy of TKI treatment and design strategies to improve treatment response. The model predicts that stimulating the differentiation of leukemic stem cells while applying TKI therapy can significantly improve treatment outcomes.


Assuntos
Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva , Camundongos , Animais , Inibidores de Proteínas Quinases/farmacologia , Inibidores de Proteínas Quinases/uso terapêutico , Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos , Mielopoese , Proteínas de Fusão bcr-abl/genética , Proteínas de Fusão bcr-abl/farmacologia , Camundongos Transgênicos , Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva/tratamento farmacológico , Leucemia Mielogênica Crônica BCR-ABL Positiva/genética
7.
Phys Rev E ; 107(3-2): 035103, 2023 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37072945

RESUMO

We study the wrinkling dynamics of three-dimensional vesicles in a time-dependent elongation flow by utilizing an immersed boundary method. For a quasispherical vesicle, our numerical results well match the predictions of perturbation analysis, where similar exponential relationships between wrinkles' characteristic wavelength and the flow strength are observed. Using the same parameters as in the experiments by Kantsler et al. [V. Kantsler et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 178102 (2007)0031-900710.1103/PhysRevLett.99.178102], our simulations of an elongated vesicle are in good agreement with their results. In addition, we get rich three-dimensional morphological details, which are favorable to comprehend the two-dimensional snapshots. This morphological information helps identify wrinkle patterns. We analyze the morphological evolution of wrinkles using spherical harmonics. We find discrepancies in elongated vesicle dynamics between simulations and perturbation analysis, highlighting the importance of the nonlinear effects. Finally, we investigate the unevenly distributed local surface tension, which largely determines the position of wrinkles excited on the vesicle membrane.

8.
Transl Res ; 255: 97-108, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36481562

RESUMO

Accurately modeling tumor biology and testing novel therapies on patient-derived cells is critically important to developing therapeutic regimens personalized to a patient's specific disease. The vascularized microtumor (VMT), or "tumor-on-a-chip," is a physiologic preclinical cancer model that incorporates key features of the native human tumor microenvironment within a transparent microfluidic platform, allowing rapid drug screening in vitro. Herein we optimize methods for generating patient-derived VMT (pVMT) using fresh colorectal cancer (CRC) biopsies and surgical resections to test drug sensitivities at the individual patient level. In response to standard chemotherapy and TGF-ßR1 inhibition, we observe heterogeneous responses between pVMT derived from 6 patient biopsies, with the pVMT recapitulating tumor growth, histological features, metabolic heterogeneity, and drug responses of actual CRC tumors. Our results suggest that a translational infrastructure providing rapid information from patient-derived tumor cells in the pVMT, as established in this study, will support efforts to improve patient outcomes.


Assuntos
Neoplasias Colorretais , Humanos , Neoplasias Colorretais/tratamento farmacológico , Microfluídica , Microambiente Tumoral
9.
J Math Biol ; 85(1): 5, 2022 07 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35796898

RESUMO

We study a classic Darcy's law model for tumor cell motion with inhomogeneous and isotropic conductivity. The tumor cells are assumed to be a constant density fluid flowing through porous extracellular matrix (ECM). The ECM is assumed to be rigid and motionless with constant porosity. One and two dimensional simulations show that the tumor mass grows from high to low conductivity regions when the tumor morphology is steady. In the one-dimensional case, we proved that when the tumor size is steady, the tumor grows towards lower conductivity regions. We conclude that this phenomenon is produced by the coupling of a special inward flow pattern in the steady tumor and Darcy's law which gives faster flow speed in higher conductivity regions.


Assuntos
Neoplasias , Condutividade Elétrica , Matriz Extracelular , Humanos , Porosidade
10.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 18(6): e1010288, 2022 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35737645

RESUMO

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009701.].

11.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 18(5): e1010039, 2022 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35522694

RESUMO

Feedback mechanisms within cell lineages are thought to be important for maintaining tissue homeostasis. Mathematical models that assume well-mixed cell populations, together with experimental data, have suggested that negative feedback from differentiated cells on the stem cell self-renewal probability can maintain a stable equilibrium and hence homeostasis. Cell lineage dynamics, however, are characterized by spatial structure, which can lead to different properties. Here, we investigate these dynamics using spatially explicit computational models, including cell division, differentiation, death, and migration / diffusion processes. According to these models, the negative feedback loop on stem cell self-renewal fails to maintain homeostasis, both under the assumption of strong spatial restrictions and fast migration / diffusion. Although homeostasis cannot be maintained, this feedback can regulate cell density and promote the formation of spatial structures in the model. Tissue homeostasis, however, can be achieved if spatially restricted negative feedback on self-renewal is combined with an experimentally documented spatial feedforward loop, in which stem cells regulate the fate of transit amplifying cells. This indicates that the dynamics of feedback regulation in tissue cell lineages are more complex than previously thought, and that combinations of spatially explicit control mechanisms are likely instrumental.


Assuntos
Modelos Biológicos , Células-Tronco , Diferenciação Celular/fisiologia , Linhagem da Célula , Retroalimentação
12.
J R Soc Interface ; 19(188): 20210922, 2022 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35317645

RESUMO

Increased intracranial pressure is the source of most critical symptoms in patients with glioma, and often the main cause of death. Clinical interventions could benefit from non-invasive estimates of the pressure distribution in the patient's parenchyma provided by computational models. However, existing glioma models do not simulate the pressure distribution and they rely on a large number of model parameters, which complicates their calibration from available patient data. Here we present a novel model for glioma growth, pressure distribution and corresponding brain deformation. The distinct feature of our approach is that the pressure is directly derived from tumour dynamics and patient-specific anatomy, providing non-invasive insights into the patient's state. The model predictions allow estimation of critical conditions such as intracranial hypertension, brain midline shift or neurological and cognitive impairments. A diffuse-domain formalism is employed to allow for efficient numerical implementation of the model in the patient-specific brain anatomy. The model is tested on synthetic and clinical cases. To facilitate clinical deployment, a high-performance computing implementation of the model has been publicly released.


Assuntos
Glioma , Hipertensão Intracraniana , Encéfalo , Glioma/patologia , Cabeça , Humanos , Hipertensão Intracraniana/diagnóstico , Hipertensão Intracraniana/etiologia , Pressão Intracraniana
13.
Ann Biomed Eng ; 50(3): 314-329, 2022 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35083584

RESUMO

Advances in omic technologies have provided insight into cancer progression and treatment response. However, the nonlinear characteristics of cancer growth present a challenge to bridge from the molecular- to the tissue-scale, as tumor behavior cannot be encapsulated by the sum of the individual molecular details gleaned experimentally. Mathematical modeling and computational simulation have been traditionally employed to facilitate analysis of nonlinear systems. In this study, for the first time tumor metabolomic data are linked via mathematical modeling to the tumor tissue-scale behavior, showing the capability to mechanistically simulate cancer progression personalized to omic information obtainable from patient tumor core biopsy analysis. Generally, a higher degree of metabolic dysregulation has been correlated with more aggressive tumor behavior. Accordingly, key parameters influenced by metabolomic data in this model include tumor proliferation, vascularization, aggressiveness, lactic acid production, monocyte infiltration and macrophage polarization, and drug effect. The model enables evaluating interactions of interest between these parameters which drive tumor growth based on the metabolomic data. The results show that the model can group patients consistently with the clinically observed outcomes of response/non-response to chemotherapy. This modeling approach provides a first step towards evaluation of tumor growth based on tumor-specific metabolomic data.


Assuntos
Simulação por Computador , Modelos Teóricos , Neoplasias/patologia , Neovascularização Patológica , Proliferação de Células , Humanos , Metabolômica/métodos
14.
Nat Comput Sci ; 2(12): 785-796, 2022 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38126024

RESUMO

Encouraging advances are being made in cancer immunotherapy modeling, especially in the key areas of developing personalized treatment strategies based on individual patient parameters, predicting treatment outcomes and optimizing immunotherapy synergy when used in combination with other treatment approaches. Here we present a focused review of the most recent mathematical modeling work on cancer immunotherapy with a focus on clinical translatability. It can be seen that this field is transitioning from pure basic science to applications that can make impactful differences in patients' lives. We discuss how researchers are integrating experimental and clinical data to fully inform models so that they can be applied for clinical predictions, and present the challenges that remain to be overcome if widespread clinical adaptation is to be realized. Lastly, we discuss the most promising future applications and areas that are expected to be the focus of extensive upcoming modeling studies.

15.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 17(12): e1009701, 2021 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34932555

RESUMO

Experiments on tumor spheroids have shown that compressive stress from their environment can reversibly decrease tumor expansion rates and final sizes. Stress release experiments show that nonuniform anisotropic elastic stresses can be distributed throughout. The elastic stresses are maintained by structural proteins and adhesive molecules, and can be actively relaxed by a variety of biophysical processes. In this paper, we present a new continuum model to investigate how the growth-induced elastic stresses and active stress relaxation, in conjunction with cell size control feedback machinery, regulate the cell density and stress distributions within growing tumors as well as the tumor sizes in the presence of external physical confinement and gradients of growth-promoting chemical fields. We introduce an adaptive reference map that relates the current position with the reference position but adapts to the current position in the Eulerian frame (lab coordinates) via relaxation. This type of stress relaxation is similar to but simpler than the classical Maxwell model of viscoelasticity in its formulation. By fitting the model to experimental data from two independent studies of tumor spheroid growth and their cell density distributions, treating the tumors as incompressible, neo-Hookean elastic materials, we find that the rates of stress relaxation of tumor tissues can be comparable to volumetric growth rates. Our study provides insight on how the biophysical properties of the tumor and host microenvironment, mechanical feedback control and diffusion-limited differential growth act in concert to regulate spatial patterns of stress and growth. When the tumor is stiffer than the host, our model predicts tumors are more able to change their size and mechanical state autonomously, which may help to explain why increased tumor stiffness is an established hallmark of malignant tumors.


Assuntos
Fenômenos Biomecânicos/fisiologia , Proliferação de Células/fisiologia , Neoplasias , Anisotropia , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Biologia Computacional , Humanos , Neoplasias/patologia , Neoplasias/fisiopatologia , Esferoides Celulares/citologia , Esferoides Celulares/fisiologia , Estresse Mecânico , Células Tumorais Cultivadas
16.
Phys Rev E ; 103(6-1): 063105, 2021 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34271714

RESUMO

In this paper, the interfacial motion between two immiscible viscous fluids in the confined geometry of a Hele-Shaw cell is studied. We consider the influence of a thin wetting film trailing behind the displaced fluid, which dynamically affects the pressure drop at the fluid-fluid interface by introducing a nonlinear dependence on the interfacial velocity. In this framework, two cases of interest are analyzed: The injection-driven flow (expanding evolution), and the lifting plate flow (shrinking evolution). In particular, we investigate the possibility of controlling the development of fingering instabilities in these two different Hele-Shaw setups when wetting effects are taken into account. By employing linear stability theory, we find the proper time-dependent injection rate Q(t) and the time-dependent lifting speed b[over ̇](t) required to control the number of emerging fingers during the expanding and shrinking evolution, respectively. Our results indicate that the consideration of wetting leads to an increase in the magnitude of Q(t) [and b[over ̇](t)] in comparison to the nonwetting strategy. Moreover, a spectrally accurate boundary integral approach is utilized to examine the validity and effectiveness of the controlling protocols at the fully nonlinear regime of the dynamics and confirms that the proposed injection and lifting schemes are feasible strategies to prescribe the morphologies of the resulting patterns in the presence of the wetting film.

17.
Lab Chip ; 21(7): 1333-1351, 2021 04 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33605955

RESUMO

Around 95% of anti-cancer drugs that show promise during preclinical study fail to gain FDA-approval for clinical use. This failure of the preclinical pipeline highlights the need for improved, physiologically-relevant in vitro models that can better serve as reliable drug-screening and disease modeling tools. The vascularized micro-tumor (VMT) is a novel three-dimensional model system (tumor-on-a-chip) that recapitulates the complex human tumor microenvironment, including perfused vasculature, within a transparent microfluidic device, allowing real-time study of drug responses and tumor-stromal interactions. Here we have validated this microphysiological system (MPS) platform for the study of colorectal cancer (CRC), the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths, by showing that gene expression, tumor heterogeneity, and treatment responses in the VMT more closely model CRC tumor clinicopathology than current standard drug screening modalities, including 2-dimensional monolayer culture and 3-dimensional spheroids.


Assuntos
Antineoplásicos , Neoplasias Colorretais , Antineoplásicos/farmacologia , Antineoplásicos/uso terapêutico , Neoplasias Colorretais/tratamento farmacológico , Avaliação Pré-Clínica de Medicamentos , Humanos , Dispositivos Lab-On-A-Chip , Microambiente Tumoral
19.
J R Soc Interface ; 18(174): 20200729, 2021 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33499768

RESUMO

The haematopoietic system has a highly regulated and complex structure in which cells are organized to successfully create and maintain new blood cells. It is known that feedback regulation is crucial to tightly control this system, but the specific mechanisms by which control is exerted are not completely understood. In this work, we aim to uncover the underlying mechanisms in haematopoiesis by conducting perturbation experiments, where animal subjects are exposed to an external agent in order to observe the system response and evolution. We have developed a novel Bayesian hierarchical framework for optimal design of perturbation experiments and proper analysis of the data collected. We use a deterministic model that accounts for feedback and feedforward regulation on cell division rates and self-renewal probabilities. A significant obstacle is that the experimental data are not longitudinal, rather each data point corresponds to a different animal. We overcome this difficulty by modelling the unobserved cellular levels as latent variables. We then use principles of Bayesian experimental design to optimally distribute time points at which the haematopoietic cells are quantified. We evaluate our approach using synthetic and real experimental data and show that an optimal design can lead to better estimates of model parameters.


Assuntos
Hematopoese , Projetos de Pesquisa , Animais , Teorema de Bayes , Divisão Celular , Modelos Biológicos
20.
J Theor Biol ; 509: 110499, 2021 01 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33130064

RESUMO

While resistance mutations are often implicated in the failure of cancer therapy, lack of response also occurs without such mutants. In bladder cancer mouse xenografts, repeated chemotherapy cycles have resulted in cancer stem cell (CSC) enrichment, and consequent loss of therapy response due to the reduced susceptibility of CSCs to drugs. A particular feedback loop present in the xenografts has been shown to promote CSC enrichment in this system. Yet, many other regulatory loops might also be operational and might promote CSC enrichment. Their identification is central to improving therapy response. Here, we perform a comprehensive mathematical analysis to define what types of regulatory feedback loops can and cannot contribute to CSC enrichment, providing guidance to the experimental identification of feedback molecules. We derive a formula that reveals whether or not the cell population experiences CSC enrichment over time, based on the properties of the feedback. We find that negative feedback on the CSC division rate or positive feedback on differentiated cell death rate can lead to CSC enrichment. Further, the feedback mediators that achieve CSC enrichment can be secreted by either CSCs or by more differentiated cells. The extent of enrichment is determined by the CSC death rate, the CSC self-renewal probability, and by feedback strength. Defining these general characteristics of feedback loops can guide the experimental screening for and identification of feedback mediators that can promote CSC enrichment in bladder cancer and potentially other tumors. This can help understand and overcome the phenomenon of CSC-based therapy resistance.


Assuntos
Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos , Neoplasias , Animais , Diferenciação Celular , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Retroalimentação , Camundongos , Células-Tronco Neoplásicas
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