Wavespeed selection and interstitial gap formation in an acid-mediated cancer invasion model
Yuhui Chen, Michael C. Dallaston

TL;DR
This paper investigates wave speed selection and interstitial gap formation in a reaction-diffusion cancer invasion model, revealing how degradation rates influence tumor invasion dynamics and the emergence of a gap region.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of wave solutions and asymptotic behavior in a tumor invasion model, linking gap formation to Fisher-KPP perturbations.
Findings
Large degradation rates lead to a logarithmically large interstitial gap.
Wave speed is primarily determined by Fisher-KPP dynamics.
Gap size is sensitive to degradation rate differences.
Abstract
We consider a two-component reaction-diffusion system that has previously been developed to model invasion of cells into a resident cell population. The system is an idealised version of models of tumour growth in which tumour cells degrade the surrounding tissue by increasing the acidity of the local environment. By numerically computing families of travelling wave solutions to this problem, we observe that a general initial condition with either compact support, or sufficiently large exponential decay in the far field, tends to the travelling wave solution that has the largest possible decay at its front. Initial conditions with sufficiently slow exponential decay tend to those travelling wave solutions that have the same exponential decay as their initial conditions. We also show that in the limit that the (nondimensional) degradation rate of resident cells is large, the system has…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMathematical Biology Tumor Growth · Mathematical and Theoretical Epidemiology and Ecology Models · Gene Regulatory Network Analysis
