Are tumor cell lineages solely shaped by mechanical forces?
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1687042
DOI10.1007/s11538-017-0333-yzbMath1378.92033arXiv1702.06192OpenAlexW2589368688WikidataQ38602640 ScholiaQ38602640MaRDI QIDQ1687042
Valérie Lobjois, Bernard Ducommun, Pierre Degond, Giacomo Dimarco, Martine Cazales, Mathieu Leroy-Lerêtre, Marie-Laure Boizeau
Publication date: 18 December 2017
Published in: Bulletin of Mathematical Biology (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1702.06192
Related Items (1)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A history of the study of solid tumour growth: the contribution of mathematical modelling
- A theoretical investigation of the effect of proliferation and adhesion on monoclonal conversion in the colonic crypt
- Cellular automaton modeling of biological pattern formation. Characterization, applications, and analysis. With a foreword by Philip K. Maini
- Contact inhibition of growth described using a multiphase model and an individual cell based model
- From single cells to tissue architecture -- a bottom-up approach to modelling the spatio-temporal organisation of complex multi-cellular systems
- A new mathematical model for avascular tumour growth
- Simple mechanical cues could explain adipose tissue morphology
- Mathematical modeling of monoclonal conversion in the colonic crypt
- A 3-D model used to explore how cell adhesion and stiffness affect cell sorting and movement in multicellular systems
- The role of stress in the growth of a multicell spheroid
- The role of mechanical host-tumour interactions in the collapse of tumour blood vessels and tumour growth dynamics
- A multiscale mathematical model of avascular tumor growth to investigate the therapeutic benefit of anti-invasive agents
- Development of a three-dimensional multiscale agent-based tumor model: simulating gene-protein interaction profiles, cell phenotypes and multicellular patterns in brain cancer
- An immersed boundary framework for modelling the growth of individual cells: an application to the early tumour development
- Individual-based and continuum models of growing cell populations: a comparison
- A hybrid mathematical model for self-organizing cell migration in the zebrafish lateral line
- A hybrid approach to multi-scale modelling of cancer
- Computational Modeling of Solid Tumor Growth: The Avascular Stage
- Single-Cell-Based Models in Biology and Medicine
- Mathematical Models of Avascular Tumor Growth
- Modelling solid tumour growth using the theory of mixtures
This page was built for publication: Are tumor cell lineages solely shaped by mechanical forces?