Emergence of organized structure in co-culture spheroids: Experiments and Theory

ORAL

Abstract

During tissue morphogenesis, from formation of embryos to tumor progression, cells often live and migrate in a heterogeneous environment consisting of many types of cells. To understand how differences in cell mechanobiological properties impact cellular self-organization and migration, we study a co-culture model composed of two distinct cell types confined in a three-dimensional spherical capsule. The cells are modeled as deformable, interacting, self-propelled particles that proliferate at specified timescales. A disordered potential is introduced to mimic the effect of the extracellular matrix (ECM). By varying the mechano-adhesive properties of each type, we investigate how differences in cell stiffness, cell-cell adhesion, and cell-ECM interaction influence collective properties of the binary cell population, such as self-assembly and migration. The predictions of the model are compared to experimental results on co-cutures of breast cancer cells and non-tumorigenic breast epithelial cells.

*This work was partially supported by a Cottrell College Science Award from the Research Corporation for Science Advancement

Authors

  • Roland Sanford

    • Rocester Institute of Technology
  • Dan Kolbman

    • University of Chicago
  • Wei Song

    • Cornell University
  • Mingming Wu

    • Cornell University
  • Minglin Ma

    • Cornell University
  • Moumita Das

    • Rochester Institute of Technology
    • Rocester Institute of Technology
    • Rochester Inst of Tech
    • RIT