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Minimal cellular automaton model with heterogeneous cell sizes predicts epithelial colony growth
Regulation of cell proliferation is a crucial aspect of tissue development
and homeostasis and plays a major role in morphogenesis, wound healing, and
tumor invasion. A phenomenon of such regulation is contact inhibition, which
describes the dramatic slowing of proliferation, cell migration and individual
cell growth when multiple cells are in contact with each other. While many
physiological, molecular and genetic factors are known, the mechanism of
contact inhibition is still not fully understood. In particular, the relevance
of cellular signaling due to interfacial contact for contact inhibition is
still debated. Cellular automata (CA) have been employed in the past as
numerically efficient mathematical models to study the dynamics of cell
ensembles, but they are not suitable to explore the origins of contact
inhibition as such agent-based models assume fixed cell sizes. We develop a
minimal, data-driven model to simulate the dynamics of planar cell cultures by
extending a probabilistic CA to incorporate size changes of individual cells
during growth and cell division. We successfully apply this model to previous
in-vitro experiments on contact inhibition in epithelial tissue: After a
systematic calibration of the model parameters to measurements of single-cell
dynamics, our CA model quantitatively reproduces independent measurements of
emergent, culture-wide features, like colony size, cell density and collective
cell migration. In particular, the dynamics of the CA model also exhibit the
transition from a low-density confluent regime to a stationary postconfluent
regime with a rapid decrease in cell size and motion. This implies that the
volume exclusion principle, a mechanical constraint which is the only
inter-cellular interaction incorporated in the model, paired with a
size-dependent proliferation rate is sufficient to generate the observed
contact inhibition.