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1.
Stem Cell Reports ; 2024 Sep 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39303706

ABSTRACT

Adult neural stem cells (NSCs) are conventionally regarded as rare cells restricted to two niches: the subventricular zone (SVZ) and the subgranular zone. Parenchymal astrocytes (ASs) can also contribute to neurogenesis after injury; however, the prevalence, distribution, and behavior of these latent NSCs remained elusive. To tackle these issues, we reconstructed the spatiotemporal pattern of striatal (STR) AS neurogenic activation after excitotoxic lesion in mice. Our results indicate that neurogenic potential is widespread among STR ASs but is focally activated at the lesion border, where it associates with different reactive AS subtypes. In this region, similarly to canonical niches, steady-state neurogenesis is ensured by the continuous stochastic activation of local ASs. Activated ASs quickly return to quiescence, while their progeny transiently expand following a stochastic behavior that features an acceleration in differentiation propensity. Notably, STR AS activation rate matches that of SVZ ASs indicating a comparable prevalence of NSC potential.

2.
J Math Biol ; 88(4): 47, 2024 Mar 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38520536

ABSTRACT

To maintain renewing epithelial tissues in a healthy, homeostatic state, cell divisions and differentiation need to be tightly regulated. Mechanisms of homeostatic regulation often rely on crowding feedback control: cells are able to sense the cell density in their environment, via various molecular and mechanosensing pathways, and respond by adjusting division, differentiation, and cell state transitions appropriately. Here, we determine, via a mathematically rigorous framework, which general conditions for the crowding feedback regulation (i) must be minimally met, and (ii) are sufficient, to allow the maintenance of homeostasis in renewing tissues. We show that those conditions naturally allow for a degree of robustness toward disruption of regulation. Furthermore, intrinsic to this feedback regulation is that stem cell identity is established collectively by the cell population, not by individual cells, which implies the possibility of 'quasi-dedifferentiation', in which cells committed to differentiation may reacquire stem cell properties upon depletion of the stem cell pool. These findings can guide future experimental campaigns to identify specific crowding feedback mechanisms.


Subject(s)
Stem Cells , Homeostasis , Cell Differentiation , Stem Cells/physiology , Cell Division
3.
Curr Stem Cell Rep ; 9(4): 67-76, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38145009

ABSTRACT

Purpose of Review: This article gives a broad overview of quantitative modelling approaches in biology and provides guidance on how to employ them to boost stem cell research, by helping to answer biological questions and to predict the outcome of biological processes. Recent Findings: The twenty-first century has seen a steady increase in the proportion of cell biology publications employing mathematical modelling to aid experimental research. However, quantitative modelling is often used as a rather decorative element to confirm experimental findings, an approach which often yields only marginal added value, and is in many cases scientifically questionable. Summary: Quantitative modelling can boost biological research in manifold ways, but one has to take some careful considerations before embarking on a modelling campaign, in order to maximise its added value, to avoid pitfalls that may lead to wrong results, and to be aware of its fundamental limitations, imposed by the risks of over-fitting and "universality".

4.
Cell Rep ; 42(5): 112425, 2023 05 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37099424

ABSTRACT

Microglia arise from the yolk sac and enter the brain during early embryogenesis. Upon entry, microglia undergo in situ proliferation and eventually colonize the entire brain by the third postnatal week in mice. However, the intricacies of their developmental expansion remain unclear. Here, we characterize the proliferative dynamics of microglia during embryonic and postnatal development using complementary fate-mapping techniques. We demonstrate that the developmental colonization of the brain is facilitated by clonal expansion of highly proliferative microglial progenitors that occupy spatial niches throughout the brain. Moreover, the spatial distribution of microglia switches from a clustered to a random pattern between embryonic and late postnatal development. Interestingly, the developmental increase in microglial numbers follows the proportional growth of the brain in an allometric manner until a mosaic distribution has been established. Overall, our findings offer insight into how the competition for space may drive microglial colonization by clonal expansion during development.


Subject(s)
Brain , Microglia , Mice , Animals , Yolk Sac , Embryonic Development
5.
Development ; 148(11)2021 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34100065

ABSTRACT

Adult tissues in multicellular organisms typically contain a variety of stem, progenitor and differentiated cell types arranged in a lineage hierarchy that regulates healthy tissue turnover. Lineage hierarchies in disparate tissues often exhibit common features, yet the general principles regulating their architecture are not known. Here, we provide a formal framework for understanding the relationship between cell molecular 'states' and cell 'types', based on the topology of admissible cell state trajectories. We show that a self-renewing cell type - if defined as suggested by this framework - must reside at the top of any homeostatic renewing lineage hierarchy, and only there. This architecture arises as a natural consequence of homeostasis, and indeed is the only possible way that lineage architectures can be constructed to support homeostasis in renewing tissues. Furthermore, under suitable feedback regulation, for example from the stem cell niche, we show that the property of 'stemness' is entirely determined by the cell environment, in accordance with the notion that stem cell identities are contextual and not determined by hard-wired, cell-intrinsic characteristics. This article has an associated 'The people behind the papers' interview.


Subject(s)
Cell Lineage/physiology , Cell Self Renewal/physiology , Stem Cells/physiology , Animals , Cell Differentiation , Homeostasis , Humans , Models, Biological , Stem Cell Niche
6.
Elife ; 92020 07 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32687057

ABSTRACT

How adult stem cells maintain self-renewing tissues is commonly assessed by analysing clonal data from in vivo cell lineage-tracing assays. To identify strategies of stem cell self-renewal requires that different models of stem cell fate choice predict sufficiently different clonal statistics. Here, we show that models of cell fate choice can, in homeostatic tissues, be categorized by exactly two 'universality classes', whereby models of the same class predict, under asymptotic conditions, the same clonal statistics. Those classes relate to generalizations of the canonical asymmetric vs. symmetric stem cell self-renewal strategies and are distinguished by a conservation law. This poses both challenges and opportunities to identify stem cell self-renewal strategies: while under asymptotic conditions, self-renewal models of the same universality class cannot be distinguished by clonal data only, models of different classes can be distinguished by simple means.


Subject(s)
Adult Stem Cells , Cell Self Renewal , Models, Theoretical , Animals , Cell Differentiation , Clone Cells , Humans
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(30): 14995-15000, 2019 07 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31289233

ABSTRACT

Patterns of gene expression are primarily determined by proteins that locally enhance or repress transcription. While many transcription factors target a restricted number of genes, others appear to modulate transcription levels globally. An example is MeCP2, an abundant methylated-DNA binding protein that is mutated in the neurological disorder Rett syndrome. Despite much research, the molecular mechanism by which MeCP2 regulates gene expression is not fully resolved. Here, we integrate quantitative, multidimensional experimental analysis and mathematical modeling to indicate that MeCP2 is a global transcriptional regulator whose binding to DNA creates "slow sites" in gene bodies. We hypothesize that waves of slowed-down RNA polymerase II formed behind these sites travel backward and indirectly affect initiation, reminiscent of defect-induced shockwaves in nonequilibrium physics transport models. This mechanism differs from conventional gene-regulation mechanisms, which often involve direct modulation of transcription initiation. Our findings point to a genome-wide function of DNA methylation that may account for the reversibility of Rett syndrome in mice. Moreover, our combined theoretical and experimental approach provides a general method for understanding how global gene-expression patterns are choreographed.


Subject(s)
DNA Methylation , Models, Theoretical , RNA Polymerase II/metabolism , Animals , Cell Line , Methyl-CpG-Binding Protein 2/genetics , Methyl-CpG-Binding Protein 2/metabolism , Mice , Protein Binding , Transcription Elongation, Genetic , Transcription Initiation, Genetic , Transcriptional Activation
8.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1975: 107-129, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31062307

ABSTRACT

Studying cell fate dynamics is complicated by the fact that direct in vivo observation of individual cell fate outcomes is usually not possible and only multicellular data of cell clones can be obtained. In this situation, experimental data alone is not sufficient to validate biological models because the hypotheses and the data cannot be directly compared and thus standard statistical tests cannot be leveraged. On the other hand, mathematical modelling can bridge the scales between a hypothesis and measured data via quantitative predictions from a mathematical model. Here, we describe how to implement the rules behind a hypothesis (cell fate outcomes) one-to-one as a stochastic model, how to evaluate such a rule-based model mathematically via analytical calculation or stochastic simulations of the model's Master equation, and to predict the outcomes of clonal statistics for respective hypotheses. We also illustrate two approaches to compare these predictions directly with the clonal data to assess the models.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation , Cell Lineage , Endoderm/cytology , Models, Theoretical , Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells/cytology , Pluripotent Stem Cells/cytology , Animals , Clone Cells , Endoderm/metabolism , Mice , Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells/metabolism , Pluripotent Stem Cells/metabolism
9.
R Soc Open Sci ; 6(12): 191090, 2019 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31903203

ABSTRACT

Cooperative dynamics are common in ecology and population dynamics. However, their commonly high degree of complexity with a large number of coupled degrees of freedom renders them difficult to analyse. Here, we present a graph-theoretical criterion, via a diakoptic approach (divide-and-conquer) to determine a cooperative system's stability by decomposing the system's dependence graph into its strongly connected components (SCCs). In particular, we show that a linear cooperative system is Lyapunov stable if the SCCs of the associated dependence graph all have non-positive dominant eigenvalues, and if no SCCs which have dominant eigenvalue zero are connected by a path.

10.
Phys Biol ; 14(6): 065005, 2017 11 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28714461

ABSTRACT

Understanding how antibiotics inhibit bacteria can help to reduce antibiotic use and hence avoid antimicrobial resistance-yet few theoretical models exist for bacterial growth inhibition by a clinically relevant antibiotic treatment regimen. In particular, in the clinic, antibiotic treatment is time-dependent. Here, we use a theoretical model, previously applied to steady-state bacterial growth, to predict the dynamical response of a bacterial cell to a time-dependent dose of ribosome-targeting antibiotic. Our results depend strongly on whether the antibiotic shows reversible transport and/or low-affinity ribosome binding ('low-affinity antibiotic') or, in contrast, irreversible transport and/or high affinity ribosome binding ('high-affinity antibiotic'). For low-affinity antibiotics, our model predicts that growth inhibition depends on the duration of the antibiotic pulse, and can show a transient period of very fast growth following removal of the antibiotic. For high-affinity antibiotics, growth inhibition depends on peak dosage rather than dose duration, and the model predicts a pronounced post-antibiotic effect, due to hysteresis, in which growth can be suppressed for long times after the antibiotic dose has ended. These predictions are experimentally testable and may be of clinical significance.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Bacteria/drug effects , Ribosomes/drug effects , Models, Biological
11.
Nat Cell Biol ; 18(9): 967-78, 2016 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27548914

ABSTRACT

Understanding the cellular mechanisms of tumour growth is key for designing rational anticancer treatment. Here we used genetic lineage tracing to quantify cell behaviour during neoplastic transformation in a model of oesophageal carcinogenesis. We found that cell behaviour was convergent across premalignant tumours, which contained a single proliferating cell population. The rate of cell division was not significantly different in the lesions and the surrounding epithelium. However, dividing tumour cells had a uniform, small bias in cell fate so that, on average, slightly more dividing than non-dividing daughter cells were generated at each round of cell division. In invasive cancers induced by Kras(G12D) expression, dividing cell fate became more strongly biased towards producing dividing over non-dividing cells in a subset of clones. These observations argue that agents that restore the balance of cell fate may prove effective in checking tumour growth, whereas those targeting cycling cells may show little selectivity.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation/physiology , Cell Division/physiology , Cell Proliferation/physiology , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/genetics , Esophageal Mucosa/metabolism , Esophageal Neoplasms/metabolism , Animals , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Cell Division/genetics , Cell Lineage/genetics , Cell Proliferation/genetics , Esophageal Neoplasms/genetics , Humans , Mice, Transgenic , Mutation/genetics
12.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(27): 7509-14, 2016 07 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27313213

ABSTRACT

To maintain cycling adult tissue in homeostasis the balance between proliferation and differentiation of stem cells needs to be precisely regulated. To investigate how stem cells achieve perfect self-renewal, emphasis has been placed on models in which stem cells progress sequentially through a one-way proliferative hierarchy. However, investigations of tissue regeneration have revealed a surprising degree of flexibility, with cells normally committed to differentiation able to recover stem cell competence following injury. Here, we investigate whether the reversible transfer of cells between states poised for proliferation or differentiation may provide a viable mechanism for a heterogeneous stem cell population to maintain homeostasis even under normal physiological conditions. By addressing the clonal dynamics, we show that such models of "dynamic heterogeneity" may be equally capable of describing the results of recent lineage tracing assays involving epithelial tissues. Moreover, together with competition for limited niche access, such models may provide a mechanism to render tissue homeostasis robust. In particular, in 2D epithelial layers, we show that the mechanism of dynamic heterogeneity avoids some pathological dependencies that undermine models based on a hierarchical stem/progenitor organization.


Subject(s)
Cell Self Renewal , Models, Biological , Animals
13.
Mol Syst Biol ; 11(3): 796, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26146675

ABSTRACT

Bacterial growth environment strongly influences the efficacy of antibiotic treatment, with slow growth often being associated with decreased susceptibility. Yet in many cases, the connection between antibiotic susceptibility and pathogen physiology remains unclear. We show that for ribosome-targeting antibiotics acting on Escherichia coli, a complex interplay exists between physiology and antibiotic action; for some antibiotics within this class, faster growth indeed increases susceptibility, but for other antibiotics, the opposite is true. Remarkably, these observations can be explained by a simple mathematical model that combines drug transport and binding with physiological constraints. Our model reveals that growth-dependent susceptibility is controlled by a single parameter characterizing the 'reversibility' of ribosome-targeting antibiotic transport and binding. This parameter provides a spectrum classification of antibiotic growth-dependent efficacy that appears to correspond at its extremes to existing binary classification schemes. In these limits, the model predicts universal, parameter-free limiting forms for growth inhibition curves. The model also leads to nontrivial predictions for the drug susceptibility of a translation mutant strain of E. coli, which we verify experimentally. Drug action and bacterial metabolism are mechanistically complex; nevertheless, this study illustrates how coarse-grained models can be used to integrate pathogen physiology into drug design and treatment strategies.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Escherichia coli/growth & development , Ribosomes/drug effects , Drug Resistance, Bacterial , Escherichia coli/drug effects , Escherichia coli/genetics , Models, Theoretical , Mutation
14.
Nat Cell Biol ; 16(6): 615-22, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24814514

ABSTRACT

Multiple cancers may arise from within a clonal region of preneoplastic epithelium, a phenomenon termed 'field change'. However, it is not known how field change develops. Here we investigate this question using lineage tracing to track the behaviour of scattered single oesophageal epithelial progenitor cells expressing a mutation that inhibits the Notch signalling pathway. Notch is frequently subject to inactivating mutation in squamous cancers. Quantitative analysis reveals that cell divisions that produce two differentiated daughters are absent from mutant progenitors. As a result, mutant clones are no longer lost by differentiation and become functionally immortal. Furthermore, mutant cells promote the differentiation of neighbouring wild-type cells, which are then lost from the tissue. These effects lead to clonal expansion, with mutant cells eventually replacing the entire epithelium. Notch inhibition in progenitors carrying p53 stabilizing mutations creates large confluent regions of doubly mutant epithelium. Field change is thus a consequence of imbalanced differentiation in individual progenitor cells.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation , Cell Lineage , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/pathology , Esophageal Neoplasms/pathology , Esophagus/pathology , Stem Cells/pathology , Animals , Cell Proliferation , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/genetics , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/metabolism , Clone Cells , Esophageal Neoplasms/genetics , Esophageal Neoplasms/metabolism , Esophagus/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Mutation , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Receptors, Notch/genetics , Receptors, Notch/metabolism , Stem Cells/metabolism , Time Factors , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transcription Factors/metabolism
15.
Phys Rev Lett ; 109(8): 088101, 2012 Aug 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23002776

ABSTRACT

Drug gradients are believed to play an important role in the evolution of bacteria resistant to antibiotics and tumors resistant to anticancer drugs. We use a statistical physics model to study the evolution of a population of malignant cells exposed to drug gradients, where drug resistance emerges via a mutational pathway involving multiple mutations. We show that a nonuniform drug distribution has the potential to accelerate the emergence of resistance when the mutational pathway involves a long sequence of mutants with increasing resistance, but if the pathway is short or crosses a fitness valley, the evolution of resistance may actually be slowed down by drug gradients. These predictions can be verified experimentally, and may help to improve strategies for combating the emergence of resistance.


Subject(s)
Cell Physiological Phenomena/drug effects , Cell Physiological Phenomena/genetics , Drug Resistance/genetics , Models, Genetic , Mutation , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Pharmaceutical Preparations/administration & dosage , Pharmacokinetics
16.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 85(1 Pt 1): 011142, 2012 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22400547

ABSTRACT

We introduce a mean-field theoretical framework to describe multiple totally asymmetric simple exclusion processes (TASEPs) with different lattice lengths and entry and exit rates, competing for a finite reservoir of particles. We present relations for the partitioning of particles between the reservoir and the lattices: These relations allow us to show that competition for particles can have nontrivial effects on the phase behavior of individual lattices. For a system with nonidentical lattices, we find that when a subset of lattices undergoes a phase transition from low to high density, the entire set of lattice currents becomes independent of total particle number. We generalize our approach to systems with a continuous distribution of lattice parameters, for which we demonstrate that measurements of the current carried by a single lattice type can be used to extract the entire distribution of lattice parameters. Our approach applies to populations of TASEPs with any distribution of lattice parameters and could easily be extended beyond the mean-field case.


Subject(s)
Colloids/chemistry , Crystallization/methods , Models, Chemical , Models, Molecular , Phase Transition , Computer Simulation
17.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 84(6 Pt 1): 060902, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22304033

ABSTRACT

We find a statistical mechanism that can adjust orientations of intracellular filaments to cell geometry in the absence of organizing centers. The effect is based on random and isotropic filament (de-)polymerization dynamics and is independent of filament interactions and explicit regulation. It can be understood by an analogy to electrostatics and appears to be induced by the confining boundaries; for periodic boundary conditions, no orientational bias emerges. Including active transport of particles, the model reproduces experimental observations of vesicle accumulations in transected axons.


Subject(s)
Intracellular Space/metabolism , Models, Biological , Axons/metabolism , Polymerization
18.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 79(3 Pt 1): 031107, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19391902

ABSTRACT

The asymmetric simple exclusion process with additional Langmuir kinetics, i.e., attachment and detachment in the bulk, is a paradigmatic model for intracellular transport. Here we study this model in the presence of randomly distributed inhomogeneities ("defects"). Using Monte Carlo simulations, we find a multitude of coexisting high- and low-density domains. The results are generic for one-dimensional driven diffusive systems with short-range interactions and can be understood in terms of a local extremal principle for the current profile. This principle is used to determine current profiles and phase diagrams as well as statistical properties of ensembles of defect samples.

19.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 75(4 Pt 1): 041905, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17500919

ABSTRACT

In eukaryotic cells, many motor proteins can move simultaneously on a single microtubule track. This leads to interesting collective phenomena such as jamming. Recently we reported [Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 118101 (2005)] a lattice-gas model which describes traffic of unconventional (single-headed) kinesins KIF1A. Here we generalize this model, introducing an interaction parameter c, to account for an interesting mechanochemical process. We have been able to extract all the parameters of the model, except c, from experimentally measured quantities. In contrast to earlier models of intracellular molecular motor traffic, our model assigns distinct "chemical" (or, conformational) states to each kinesin to account for the hydrolysis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP), the chemical fuel of the motor. Our model makes experimentally testable theoretical predictions. We determine the phase diagram of the model in planes spanned by experimentally controllable parameters, namely, the concentrations of kinesins and ATP. Furthermore, the phase-separated regime is studied in some detail using analytical methods and simulations to determine, e.g., the position of shocks. Comparison of our theoretical predictions with experimental results is expected to elucidate the nature of the mechanochemical process captured by the parameter c.


Subject(s)
Kinesins/chemistry , Microtubules/chemistry , Nerve Tissue Proteins/chemistry , Adenosine Diphosphate/chemistry , Adenosine Triphosphate/chemistry , Biophysics/methods , Calibration , Humans , Hydrolysis , Kinesins/metabolism , Kinetics , Normal Distribution , Oscillometry , Stereoisomerism , Stress, Mechanical , Time Factors
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