A minimal model of smoothly dividing disk-shaped cells
Lukas Hupe, Yoav G. Pollack, Jonas Isensee, Aboutaleb Amiri, Ramin, Golestanian, Philip Bittihn

TL;DR
This paper introduces a minimal, mechanically consistent model for dividing disk-shaped cells that ensures force continuity during division, facilitating the study of collective behaviors in biological systems.
Contribution
The authors develop a simple yet physically consistent disk cell model that maintains force continuity during division, improving upon previous models and enabling detailed mechanical analysis.
Findings
Force continuity during cell division is achieved in the model.
The model reproduces collective behaviors consistent with existing literature.
The implementation is available as an open-source Julia package.
Abstract
Replication through cell division is one of the most fundamental processes of life and a major driver of dynamics in systems ranging from bacterial colonies to embryogenesis, tissues and tumors. While regulation often plays a role in shaping self-organization, mounting evidence suggests that many biologically relevant behaviors exploit principles based on a limited number of physical ingredients, and particle-based models have become a popular platform to reconstitute and investigate these emergent dynamics. However, incorporating division into such models often leads to aberrant mechanical fluctuations that hamper physically meaningful analysis. Here, we present a minimal model focusing on mechanical consistency during division. Cells are comprised of two nodes, overlapping disks which separate from each other during cell division, resulting in transient dumbbell shapes. Internal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMathematical Biology Tumor Growth · Advanced Mathematical Modeling in Engineering
