Abstract Cancer is a genetic disease that results from accumulation of unfavorable mutations. As soon as genetic and epigenetic modifications associated with these mutations become strong enough, the uncontrolled tumor cell growth is initiated, eventually spreading through healthy tissues. Clarifying the dynamics of cancer initiation is thus critically important for understanding the molecular mechanisms of tumorigenesis. Here we present a new theoretical method to evaluate the dynamic processes associated with the cancer initiation. It is based on a discrete-state stochastic description of the formation of tumors as a fixation of cancerous mutations in tissues. Using a first-passage analysis the probabilities for the cancer to appear and the times before it happens, which are viewed as fixation probabilities and fixation times, respectively, are explicitly calculated. It is predicted that the slowest cancer initiation dynamics is observed for neutral mutations, while it is fast for both advantageous and, surprisingly, disadvantageous mutations. The method is applied for estimating the cancer initiation times from experimentally available lifetime cancer risks for different types of cancer. It is found that the higher probability of the cancer to occur does not necessary lead to the faster times of starting the cancer. Our theoretical analysis helps to clarify microscopic aspects of cancer initiation processes.
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The role of spatial structures of tissues in cancer initiation dynamics
Abstract It is widely believed that biological tissues evolved to lower the risks of cancer development. One of the specific ways to minimize the chances of tumor formation comes from proper spatial organization of tissues. However, the microscopic mechanisms of underlying processes remain not fully understood. We present a theoretical investigation on the role of spatial structures in cancer initiation dynamics. In our approach, the dynamics of single mutation fixations are analyzed using analytical calculations and computer simulations by mapping them to Moran processes on graphs with different connectivity that mimic various spatial structures. It is found that while the fixation probability is not affected by modifying the spatial structures of the tissues, the fixation times can change dramatically. The slowest dynamics is observed in ‘quasi-one-dimensional’ structures, while the fastest dynamics is observed in ‘quasi-three-dimensional’ structures. Theoretical calculations also suggest that there is a critical value of the degree of graph connectivity, which mimics the spatial dimension of the tissue structure, above which the spatial structure of the tissue has no effect on the mutation fixation dynamics. An effective discrete-state stochastic model of cancer initiation is utilized to explain our theoretical results and predictions. Our theoretical analysis clarifies some important aspects on the role of the tissue spatial structures in the cancer initiation processes.
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- PAR ID:
- 10416867
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Physical Biology
- Volume:
- 19
- Issue:
- 5
- ISSN:
- 1478-3967
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 056003
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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