Abstract

The evolution of various competing cell types in tissues, and the resulting persistent tissue population, is studied numerically and analytically in a particle-based model of active tissues. Mutations change the properties of cells in various ways, including their mechanical properties. Each mutation results in an advantage or disadvantage to grow in the competition between different cell types. While changes in signaling processes and biochemistry play an important role, we focus on changes in the mechanical properties by studying the result of variation of growth force and adhesive cross-interactions between cell types. For independent mutations of growth force and adhesion strength, the tissue evolves towards cell types with high growth force and low internal adhesion strength, as both increase the homeostatic pressure. Motivated by biological evidence, we postulate a coupling between both parameters, such that an increased growth force comes at the cost of a higher internal adhesion strength or vice versa. This tradeoff controls the evolution of the tissue, ranging from unidirectional evolution to very heterogeneous and dynamic populations. The special case of two competing cell types reveals three distinct parameter regimes: two in which one cell type outcompetes the other, and one in which both cell types coexist in a highly mixed state. Interestingly, a single mutated cell alone suffices to reach the mixed state, while a finite mutation rate affects the results only weakly. Finally, the coupling between changes in growth force and adhesion strength reveals a mechanical explanation for the evolution towards intra-tumor heterogeneity, in which multiple species coexist even under a constant evolutionary pressure.

Highlights

  • Mutations change the cell fitness and its chance to survive and proliferate [1].Advantageous mutations are more likely to persist due to natural selection, which drives the evolution of a tissue towards fitter cells [2]

  • In a regime around a balanced tradeoff, multiple cell types coexist in a tissue, providing a tentative explanation for tumor heterogeneity

  • The special case of a competition between two cell types facilitates the study of the underlying competition mechanism

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Summary

Introduction

Mutations change the cell fitness and its chance to survive and proliferate [1]. Advantageous mutations are more likely to persist due to natural selection, which drives the evolution of a tissue towards fitter cells [2]. Tumorigenesis might be expected to happen in a serial manner, i.e. a cell acquiring a ”beneficial” mutation and taking over the whole tissue. A daughter cell acquires another mutation and again takes over. Tumors do not consist of a single cell type, but instead several subpopulations coexist within the same tumor. This is called intra-tumor heterogeneity [5]

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