Spatially Heterogeneous Dynamics of Cells in a Growing Tumor Spheroid: Comparison Between Theory and Experiments
Sumit Sinha, Abdul N Malmi-Kakkada, Xin Li, Himadri S. Samanta, D., Thirumalai

TL;DR
This study combines experiments and simulations to reveal that cells in a tumor spheroid exhibit spatially heterogeneous dynamics, with core cells showing glassy behavior and peripheral cells showing persistent, superdiffusive motion, shedding light on tumor heterogeneity.
Contribution
It demonstrates that minimal cell models can accurately reproduce the spatially heterogeneous cell dynamics observed in tumor spheroids without parameter fitting.
Findings
Core cells exhibit subdiffusive, glassy dynamics.
Peripheral cells show superdiffusive, persistent motion.
Model predictions align quantitatively with experimental data.
Abstract
Collective cell movement, characterized by multiple cells that are in contact for substantial periods of time and undergo correlated motion, plays a central role in cancer and embryogenesis. Recent imaging experiments have provided time-dependent traces of individual cells, thus providing an unprecedented picture of tumor spheroid growth. By using simulations of a minimal cell model, we analyze the experimental data that map the movement of cells in fibrosarcoma tumor spheroid embedded in a collagen matrix. Both simulations and experiments show that cells in the core of the spheroid exhibit subdiffusive glassy dynamics (mean square displacement, with ), whereas cells in the periphery exhibit superdiffusive motion, with . The motion of most of the cells near the periphery undergo highly persistent and…
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