4.7 Article

A mechanobiological model for tumor spheroid evolution with application to glioblastoma: A continuum multiphysics approach

Journal

COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 159, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2023.106897

Keywords

Cellular spheroid; Glioblastoma; Mechanobiology; Numerical simulation; Finite element method

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This study proposes a continuum mechanobiological model that explains the evolution process of tumor spheroids and reveals the relationship between cellular mechanical activity, nutrient consumption, and cell dynamics. Through validation experiments, the model is able to explain different outcomes, such as spheroid growth or shrinking, demonstrating the important role of mechanical interactions among cells in their evolution.
Background: Spheroids are in vitro quasi-spherical structures of cell aggregates, eventually cultured within a hydrogel matrix, that are used, among other applications, as a technological platform to investigate tumor formation and evolution. Several interesting features can be replicated using this methodology, such as cell communication mechanisms, the effect of gradients of nutrients, or the creation of realistic 3D biological structures. The main objective of this work is to link the spheroid evolution with the mechanical activity of cells, coupled with nutrient consumption and the subsequent cell dynamics.Method: We propose a continuum mechanobiological model which accounts for the most relevant phenomena that take place in tumor spheroid evolution under in vitro suspension, namely, nutrient diffusion in the spheroid, kinetics of cellular growth and death, and mechanical interactions among the cells. The model is qualitatively validated, after calibration of the model parameters, versus in vitro experiments of spheroids of different glioblastoma cell lines.Results: Our model is able to explain in a novel way quite different setups, such as spheroid growth (up to six times the initial configuration for U-87 MG cell line) or shrinking (almost half of the initial configuration for U-251 MG cell line); as the result of the mechanical interplay of cells driven by cellular evolution. Conclusions: Glioblastoma tumor spheroid evolution is driven by mechanical interactions of the cell aggregate and the dynamical evolution of the cell population. All this information can be used to further investigate mechanistic effects in the evolution of tumors and their role in cancer disease.

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