Survival Probabilities at Spherical Frontiers
Maxim O. Lavrentovich, David R. Nelson

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how the survival probability of mutants is affected by different spherical expansion growth regimes, providing analytical results for arbitrary growth exponents and comparing them with simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analytical framework for calculating mutant survival probabilities in spherical expansions with arbitrary growth exponents, extending previous 2D results.
Findings
Mutations at linearly inflating fronts have significantly higher survival probabilities.
Analytical formulas are derived for arbitrary growth exponents $ heta$.
Survival probabilities vary notably between different growth regimes.
Abstract
Motivated by tumor growth and spatial population genetics, we study the interplay between evolutionary and spatial dynamics at the surfaces of three-dimensional, spherical range expansions. We consider range expansion radii that grow with an arbitrary power-law in time: , where is a growth exponent, is the initial radius, and is a characteristic time for the growth, to be affected by the inflating geometry. We vary the parameters and to capture a variety of possible growth regimes. Guided by recent results for two-dimensional inflating range expansions, we identify key dimensionless parameters that describe the survival probability of a mutant cell with a small selective advantage arising at the population frontier. Using analytical techniques, we calculate this probability for arbitrary . We compare our results to…
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