Komarova Natalia L
Department of Mathematics, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697, USA.
Bull Math Biol. 2006 Oct;68(7):1573-99. doi: 10.1007/s11538-005-9046-8.
The multistage carcinogenesis hypothesis has been formulated by a number of authors as a stochastic process. However, most previous models assumed "perfect mixing" in the population of cells, and included no information about spatial locations. In this work, we studied the role of spatial dynamics in carcinogenesis. We formulated a 1D spatial generalization of a constant population (Moran) birth-death process, and described the dynamics analytically. We found that in the spatial model, the probability of fixation of advantageous and disadvantageous mutants is lower, and the rate of generation of double-hit mutants (the so-called tunneling rate) is higher, compared to those for the space-free model. This means that the results previously obtained for space-free models give an underestimation for rates of cancer initiation in the case where the first event is the generation of a double-hit mutant, e.g. the inactivation of a tumor-suppressor gene.
多位作者将多阶段致癌假说阐述为一个随机过程。然而,此前的大多数模型都假定细胞群体中存在“完全混合”,且未包含有关空间位置的信息。在这项研究中,我们探讨了空间动态在致癌过程中的作用。我们构建了一个恒定群体(莫兰)生死过程的一维空间推广模型,并对其动态进行了解析描述。我们发现,与无空间模型相比,在空间模型中,有利和不利突变体固定的概率更低,而双打击突变体的产生速率(即所谓的隧穿速率)更高。这意味着,在首个事件为双打击突变体产生(例如肿瘤抑制基因失活)的情况下,此前无空间模型所得到的结果低估了癌症起始的速率。