Abstract

Effective multicellularity requires both cooperation and competition between constituent cells. Cooperation involves sacrificing individual fitness in favour of that of the community, but excessive cooperation makes the community susceptible to senescence and ageing. Competition eliminates unfit senescent cells via natural selection and thus slows down ageing, but excessive competition makes the community susceptible to cheaters, as exemplified by cancer and cancer-like phenomena. These observations suggest that an optimal level of intercellular competition in a multicellular organism maximizes organismal vitality by delaying the inevitability of ageing. We quantify this idea using a statistical mechanical framework that leads to a generalized replicator dynamical system for the population of cells that changes their vitality and cooperation due to somatic mutations that make them susceptible to ageing and/or cancer. By accounting for the cost of cooperation and strength of competition in a minimal setting, we show that our model predicts an optimal value of competition that maximizes vitality and delays the inevitability of senescence or cancer. The results have implications for the design of strategies aimed at delaying ageing in biological, technical and social systems that exhibit similar processes.

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