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Stress generation, relaxation and size control in confined tumor growth.

Authors :
Yan H
Ramirez-Guerrero D
Lowengrub J
Wu M
Source :
PLoS computational biology [PLoS Comput Biol] 2021 Dec 21; Vol. 17 (12), pp. e1009701. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Dec 21 (Print Publication: 2021).
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Experiments on tumor spheroids have shown that compressive stress from their environment can reversibly decrease tumor expansion rates and final sizes. Stress release experiments show that nonuniform anisotropic elastic stresses can be distributed throughout. The elastic stresses are maintained by structural proteins and adhesive molecules, and can be actively relaxed by a variety of biophysical processes. In this paper, we present a new continuum model to investigate how the growth-induced elastic stresses and active stress relaxation, in conjunction with cell size control feedback machinery, regulate the cell density and stress distributions within growing tumors as well as the tumor sizes in the presence of external physical confinement and gradients of growth-promoting chemical fields. We introduce an adaptive reference map that relates the current position with the reference position but adapts to the current position in the Eulerian frame (lab coordinates) via relaxation. This type of stress relaxation is similar to but simpler than the classical Maxwell model of viscoelasticity in its formulation. By fitting the model to experimental data from two independent studies of tumor spheroid growth and their cell density distributions, treating the tumors as incompressible, neo-Hookean elastic materials, we find that the rates of stress relaxation of tumor tissues can be comparable to volumetric growth rates. Our study provides insight on how the biophysical properties of the tumor and host microenvironment, mechanical feedback control and diffusion-limited differential growth act in concert to regulate spatial patterns of stress and growth. When the tumor is stiffer than the host, our model predicts tumors are more able to change their size and mechanical state autonomously, which may help to explain why increased tumor stiffness is an established hallmark of malignant tumors.<br />Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1553-7358
Volume :
17
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
PLoS computational biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34932555
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009701