Multiscale modelling of intestinal crypt organization and carcinogenesis
Alexander G. Fletcher, Philip J. Murray, Philip K. Maini

TL;DR
This paper reviews multiscale mathematical models of intestinal crypts and colorectal carcinogenesis, highlighting their predictions, challenges, and potential for reducing computational costs in understanding cancer development.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of mathematical approaches to multiscale crypt modelling, emphasizing validated predictions and discussing methods to simplify complex models.
Findings
Validated model predictions of crypt behaviour
Identification of key multiscale modelling challenges
Discussion of coarse-grained model derivations
Abstract
Colorectal cancers are the third most common type of cancer. They originate from intestinal crypts, glands that descend from the intestinal lumen into the underlying connective tissue. Normal crypts are thought to exist in a dynamic equilibrium where the rate of cell production at the base of a crypt is matched by that of loss at the top. Understanding how genetic alterations accumulate and proceed to disrupt this dynamic equilibrium is fundamental to understanding the origins of colorectal cancer. Colorectal cancer emerges from the interaction of biological processes that span several spatial scales, from mutations that cause inappropriate intracellular responses to changes at the cell/tissue level, such as uncontrolled proliferation and altered motility and adhesion. Multiscale mathematical modelling can provide insight into the spatiotemporal organisation of such a complex, highly…
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