Physical Confinement and Cell Proximity Increase Cell Migration Rates and Invasiveness: A Mathematical Model of Cancer Cell Invasion through Flexible Channels
Qiyao Peng, Fred J Vermolen, Daphne Weihs

TL;DR
This study presents a mathematical model demonstrating that mechanical interactions and channel flexibility significantly enhance cancer cell migration and invasiveness, with implications for understanding metastasis.
Contribution
The paper extends previous models to show how cell proximity and channel flexibility influence migration speed, highlighting the role of mechanical interactions in cancer invasion.
Findings
Follower cells migrate faster when distant from leader cells.
Optimal channel width maximizes cell migration speed.
Collective migration speeds up invasion by 12%."
Abstract
Cancer cell migration between different body parts is the driving force behind cancer metastasis, which is the main cause of mortality of patients. Migration of cancer cells often proceeds by penetration through narrow cavities in locally stiff, yet flexible tissues. In our previous work, we developed a model for cell geometry evolution during invasion, which we extend here to investigate whether leader and follower (cancer) cells that only interact mechanically can benefit from sequential transmigration through narrow micro-channels and cavities. We consider two cases of cells sequentially migrating through a flexible channel: leader and follower cells being closely adjacent or distant. Using Wilcoxon's signed-rank test on the data collected from Monte Carlo simulations, we conclude that the modelled transmigration speed for the follower cell is significantly larger than for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCellular Mechanics and Interactions · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Mathematical Biology Tumor Growth
MethodsTest · SPEED: Separable Pyramidal Pooling EncodEr-Decoder for Real-Time Monocular Depth Estimation on Low-Resource Settings
