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Mark A.J. Chaplain Anastasios Matzavinos Vladimir A. Kuznetsov

Mathematical Modelling of the Spatio-temporal Response of Cytotoxic T-Lymphocytes to a Solid Tumour. Mark A.J. Chaplain Anastasios Matzavinos Vladimir A. Kuznetsov. Mathematical Medicine and Biology 21 , 1-34 (2004) C. R. Biologies 327, 995-1008 (2004). Talk Overview.

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Mark A.J. Chaplain Anastasios Matzavinos Vladimir A. Kuznetsov

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  1. Mathematical Modelling of the Spatio-temporal Response of Cytotoxic T-Lymphocytes to a Solid Tumour Mark A.J. Chaplain Anastasios Matzavinos Vladimir A. Kuznetsov Mathematical Medicine and Biology 21, 1-34 (2004) C. R. Biologies 327, 995-1008 (2004)

  2. Talk Overview • Biological (pathological) background • The immune system • Mathematical model of immune-tumour interactions • Numerical analysis and simulations • Model analysis • Discussion and conclusions

  3. Normal/Transformed Cell Chemical Carcinogen Radiation Viruses • Carcinogens interact with cell components (nucleus) • Genetic mutations result (e.g. p53) • Normal cell becomes a transformed cell • Key difference from normal cell: uncontrolled proliferation • Small cluster of malignant cells may still be destroyed

  4. The Individual Cancer Cell: “A Nonlinear Dynamical System”

  5. Solid Tumour Growth • Avascular growth phase (no blood supply) • Angiogenesis (blood vessel network) • Vascular growth • Invasion and metastasis

  6. Avascular Growth: The Multicellular Spheroid • ~ 10 6 cells • maximum diameter ~ 2mm • Necrotic core • Quiescent region • Thin proliferating rim

  7. Tumour-induced angiogenesis

  8. Invasive Growth Generic name for a malignant epithelial (solid) tumour is a CARCINOMA (Greek: Karkinos, a crab). Irregular, jagged shape often assumed due to local spread of carcinoma. Cancer cells break through basement membrane Basement membrane

  9. Metastasis: “A Multistep Process”

  10. The Transformed Cell Chemical Carcinogen Radiation Viruses • Carcinogens interact with cell components (nucleus) • Genetic mutations result (e.g. p53) • Normal cell becomes a transformed cell • Key difference from normal cell: uncontrolled proliferation • Small cluster of malignant cells may still be destroyed

  11. The Immune System The immune systemis a complex system of cells and molecules distributed throughout our bodies that provides us with a basic defence against bacteria, viruses, fungi, and other pathogenic agents.

  12. The Immune System Neutrophil “attacking” a bacterium

  13. Cytotoxic T-Lymphocytes

  14. Lymphocytes • One of the most important cell types of the immune system is a class of white blood cells known as lymphocytes. • These cells are created in the bone marrow (B), along with all of the other blood cells, and the thymus (T) and are transported throughout the body via the blood stream. • They can leave the blood through capillaries, explore tissues for foreign molecules or cells (antigens), and then return to the blood through the lymph system.

  15. Cytotoxic T-Lymphocytes • A particular sub-population of lymphocytes called cytotoxic T cells (CTLs) are responsible for killing virally infected cells and cells that appear abnormal, such as some tumour cells. • Tumour-specific CTLs can be isolated from animals and humans with established tumours, such as melanomas. • Tumours express antigens that are recognized as “foreign” by the immune system of the tumour-bearing host.

  16. CTL – Tumour Cell Complexes • The process of killing a tumour cell by a CTL consists of two main stages: (I) CTL binding to the membrane of the tumour cell and (II) the delivery of apoptotic biochemical signals from the CTL to the tumour cell. • During the formation of tumour cell–CTL complexes, the CTLs secrete certain soluble diffusible chemicals (chemokines), which recruit more effector cells to the immediate neighbourhood of the tumour.

  17. Cancer Dormancy • In some cases, relatively small tumours are in cell-cycle arrest or there is a balance between cell proliferation and cell death. • This “dynamic” steady state of a fully malignant, but regulated-through-growth-control, tumour, could continue many months or years. • In many (but not all) cases such a latent form of small numbers of malignant tumours is mediated by cellular immunity and in particular by CTLs. • Clinically, such latent forms of tumours have been referred to as cancer dormancy.

  18. Clinical Implications of Cancer Dormancy • Patients with breast cancers have recurrences at a steady rate 10 to 20 years after mastectomy. • Both melanoma and renal carcinoma can have recurrences a decade or two after removal of the primary tumour. • There is a need for controlling biological processes such as micrometastases and cancer dormancy. • Mathematical modelling can be a powerful tool in predicting therapeutic spatial and temporal regimes for the application of various immunotherapies.

  19. Mathematical Model Our mathematical model will be based around the key interactions between the CTLs, the tumour cells and the secretion of chemokine. Initially 6 dependent variables in a 1-dimensional domain.

  20. Basic Kinetic Scheme of the Model Our mathematical model will be based around the key interactions between the CTLs and the tumour cells.

  21. Basic Kinetic Scheme (cont.) Applying the law of mass action:

  22. Equation Governing the CTLs Term derived through fitting to experimental data.

  23. The Role of the Heaviside Function The Heaviside function h separates the domain of interest into two subregions, an epidermis-like one and a dermis-like one.

  24. Equations Governing Remaining Cell Types and Chemokine

  25. Parameter Estimation • The murine B cell lymphoma is used as an experimental model of cancer dormancy in mice (Uhr & Marches 2001). • The kinetic parameters of our model were determined to have the following values:

  26. Initial Conditions

  27. Travelling Wave Solutions

  28. “Cancer Dormancy” Simulation

  29. Temporal Dynamics of theCTL Overall Population

  30. Temporal Dynamics of the Tumour Cell Overall Population

  31. Temporal Dynamics of theCell Complex Overall Population

  32. Early Oscillations in theTotal Number of Tumour Cells

  33. Reaction Kinetics ODE System We consider the following autonomous system of ODEs that describes the underlying spatially homogeneous kinetics of our system (with the Heaviside function omitted):

  34. Linear Stability Analysis The “healthy” steady state (unstable) The “tumour dormancy” steady state (unstable)

  35. Limit Cycle

  36. Limit Cycle

  37. Hopf Bifurcation

  38. Coexistence of Limit Cycles

  39. Spatio-temporal Chaos ? • The evolution of the kinetics of our system appears to have some similarities with the evolution of the ODE kinetics of the predator-prey ecological models presented in Sherratt et al. (1995). • The systems presented there were able to depict an invasive wave of predators with irregular spatio-temporal oscillations behind the wave front. • Sherratt et al. (1995) undertook a detailed investigation of that particular behaviour in the framework of simplified reaction-diffusion systems of λ–ω type. • They were able to relate the appearance of these irregularities with periodic doubling and bifurcations to tori, which are well known routes to chaos.

  40. Bifurcation Diagrams WithRespect toParameter p

  41. Travelling Wave Analysis

  42. Travelling Wave Analysis 5-dimensional 1st order ODE system….

  43. Steady states => Existence of heteroclinic connection…. (Guckenheimer & Holmes)

  44. Travelling Wave Analysis

  45. Travelling Wave Approximation

  46. Travelling Wave Approximation

  47. Travelling Wave Approximation

  48. Radially Symmetric SolidTumour Growth

  49. “Three-dimensional” Simulation

  50. Two-dimensional Simulation

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