Bone Remodeling as a Spatial Evolutionary Game
Marc D. Ryser, Kevin A. Murgas

TL;DR
This paper introduces a spatial evolutionary game theory model of bone remodeling that captures cell interactions, osteocyte regulation, and spatial dynamics, providing new insights into bone tissue stability and structure.
Contribution
The study presents a novel, analytically tractable spatial model of bone remodeling that explicitly includes osteocyte regulation and classifies dynamic regimes.
Findings
Identified parameter regions allowing coexistence of bone states
Simulated sponge-like bone cluster formation in 3D
Revealed stabilizing effects of spatial structure
Abstract
Bone remodeling is a complex process involving cell-cell interactions, biochemical signaling and mechanical stimuli. Early models of the biological aspects of remodeling were non-spatial and focused on the local dynamics at a fixed location in the bone. Several spatial extensions of these models have been proposed, but they generally suffer from two limitations: first, they are not amenable to analysis and are computationally expensive, and second, they neglect the role played by bone-embedded osteocytes. To address these issues, we developed a novel model of spatial remodeling based on the principles of evolutionary game theory. The analytically tractable framework describes the spatial interactions between zones of bone resorption, bone formation and quiescent bone, and explicitly accounts for regulation of remodeling by bone-embedded, mechanotransducing osteocytes. Using tools from…
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