Formation of motile cell clusters in heterogeneous model tumors: the role of cell-cell alignment
Quirine J. S. Braat, Cornelis Storm, Liesbeth M. C. Janssen

TL;DR
This study uses computer simulations to explore how cell-cell alignment influences the formation of motile tumor cell clusters within heterogeneous tumors, revealing that intermediate alignment strengths promote larger clusters, while dense environments inhibit them.
Contribution
It demonstrates how cell-cell alignment and cellular environment density jointly affect tumor cell clustering, providing new insights into early metastasis mechanisms.
Findings
Intermediate alignment strengths maximize cluster size.
Dense cellular environments suppress large cluster formation.
Stronger alignment leads to larger clusters in free space, but not in dense tumors.
Abstract
Circulating tumor cell clusters play an important role in the metastatic cascade. These clusters can acquire a migratory and more invasive phenotype, and coordinate their motion to migrate as a collective. Before such clusters can form by collectively detaching from a primary tumor, however, the cluster must first aggregate in the tumor interior. The mechanism of this cluster formation process is still poorly understood. One of the possible ways for cells to cluster is by aligning their direction of motion with their neighboring cells. This work aims to investigate the role of this cell-cell alignment interaction on the formation of motile cell clusters inside the bulk of a tumor using computer simulations. We employ a Cellular Potts model in which we model a two-dimensional heterogeneous confluent layer containing both motile and non-motile cells. Our results indicate that the degree…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrotubule and mitosis dynamics · Cellular Mechanics and Interactions · Cell Image Analysis Techniques
