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Project Macrophage: Macrophages on the Move. Heather More, Rachel Psutka, Vishaal Rajani. Overview. Tumour grows quickly Hypoxia Release of chemoattractants Macrophage migration Release of angiogenic factors Blood vessel growth. Tumours. Abnormal growth of tissue
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Project Macrophage: Macrophages on the Move Heather More, Rachel Psutka, Vishaal Rajani
Overview Tumour grows quickly Hypoxia Release of chemoattractants Macrophage migration Release of angiogenic factors Blood vessel growth
Tumours • Abnormal growth of tissue • Macrophages migrate via chemotaxis • Engineered macrophages activated to release chemicals – kill tumour cells
Macrophages in Tumours • Movement via chemotaxis – innate behavioural response to the addition of a chemical • Tumour cells release chemoattractants under hypoxia
Chemotaxis Video • Chemotaxis
Macrophage • Originate from monocytes • Phagocytotic, specific and non-specific defense • Engulf cellular debris and pathogens • Assist in wound healing, migrate to hypoxic regions
Macrophage Video • Macrophage
Blood Vessel Growth • Macrophages release angiogenic factors • Promotes blood vessel growth
Angiogenesis Video • Angiogenesis
Cells For our 1-dimensional purposes... Hypoxic cells Necrotic core Live cells
Building a model for chemotaxis • Chemoattractants released by hypoxic cells attract macrophages • Taking the diffusion equation of macrophage density at position x and time t; where a is the diffusion coefficient.
We add an “attracting” term which describes the attraction of macrophages to positions of highest chemoattractant concentration, becoming: Diffusion Term Attraction Term where X denotes the chemotaxis coefficient, c(x,t) denotes the chemoattractant concentration at position x, time t.
Exploring Chemotaxis Hypoxic cells emit chemoattractants chemoattractant concentration length of tumour What kind of function can we use to model this?
Exploring Chemotaxis Using a Gaussian profile for the concentration of chemoattractants; we solved the attraction-diffusion equation of macrophages numerically, using MAPLE.
What would happen if we introduced bioengineered macrophages that had a killing effect on tumour cells?
a, r β Ф β a,
Building the model Chemoattractant concentration spread over space is proportional to hypoxic cells over space... For our purposes .
Hypoxic Cells killing effect of macrophages, where β is the proportion of bioengineered macrophages the proportion of living cells that become hypoxic
Living Cells logistic growth of tumour cells killing effect of macrophages, where β is the proportion of bioengineered macrophages living cells that become hypoxic What determines r?
Becoming Hypoxic When cells are lacking oxygen, they are hypoxic and do not divide. We want a growth rate that applies only to cells that are on the outside layers of the cell. BUT step functions are NOT continuous. Let
Initial and Boundary Conditions Boundary Conditions Initial Conditions Of the two possibilities, we used these ones.
Observations • decreases faster than • and/or causes faster decrease of and • causes slower decrease of and • a large amount of engineered macrophages with enhanced sensitivity to chemoattractant and low diffusion rates are required in order to have the eventual death of all cells
Observations β = 0.5 β = 4
Assumptions • No angiogenesis • 1D tumour • Killing effect was assumed to be the same for living and hypoxic cells • Proliferation of hypoxic cells is negligible
Conclusions • β has a threshold... a sufficient killing effect is needed to kill the tumour entirely • Increasing macrophage sensitivity to chemoattractants would increase the killing effect of bioengineered macrophages • Hypoxic cells die faster than living cells with the introduction of bioengineered macrophages
Future Projects/Questions • Hardcore analysis of β • Conservative PDE Solver • Angiogenesis • Necrotic core...spatial modelling of tumor • 2D and 3D models • Chemotherapy, Radiotherapy
Acknowledgements • Byrne, H. The role of mathematics in solid tumour growth. Mathematics Today. April 1999, 48-53. • Gerda de Vries, Caroline Bampfylde, Jim Keener, Tomas de-Camino-Beck • Colin More (Heather’s brother, for Maple help) • All other instructors and volunteers for background knowledge • Fellow students for motivation and emotional support