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PhysiCell: An open source physics-based cell simulator for 3-D multicellular systems

Many multicellular systems problems can only be understood by studying how cells move, grow, divide, interact, and die. Tissue-scale dynamics emerge from systems of many interacting cells as they respond to and influence their microenvironment. The ideal “virtual laboratory” for such multicellular s...

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Autores principales: Ghaffarizadeh, Ahmadreza, Heiland, Randy, Friedman, Samuel H., Mumenthaler, Shannon M., Macklin, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5841829/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29474446
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005991
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author Ghaffarizadeh, Ahmadreza
Heiland, Randy
Friedman, Samuel H.
Mumenthaler, Shannon M.
Macklin, Paul
author_facet Ghaffarizadeh, Ahmadreza
Heiland, Randy
Friedman, Samuel H.
Mumenthaler, Shannon M.
Macklin, Paul
author_sort Ghaffarizadeh, Ahmadreza
collection PubMed
description Many multicellular systems problems can only be understood by studying how cells move, grow, divide, interact, and die. Tissue-scale dynamics emerge from systems of many interacting cells as they respond to and influence their microenvironment. The ideal “virtual laboratory” for such multicellular systems simulates both the biochemical microenvironment (the “stage”) and many mechanically and biochemically interacting cells (the “players” upon the stage). PhysiCell—physics-based multicellular simulator—is an open source agent-based simulator that provides both the stage and the players for studying many interacting cells in dynamic tissue microenvironments. It builds upon a multi-substrate biotransport solver to link cell phenotype to multiple diffusing substrates and signaling factors. It includes biologically-driven sub-models for cell cycling, apoptosis, necrosis, solid and fluid volume changes, mechanics, and motility “out of the box.” The C++ code has minimal dependencies, making it simple to maintain and deploy across platforms. PhysiCell has been parallelized with OpenMP, and its performance scales linearly with the number of cells. Simulations up to 10(5)-10(6) cells are feasible on quad-core desktop workstations; larger simulations are attainable on single HPC compute nodes. We demonstrate PhysiCell by simulating the impact of necrotic core biomechanics, 3-D geometry, and stochasticity on the dynamics of hanging drop tumor spheroids and ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast. We demonstrate stochastic motility, chemical and contact-based interaction of multiple cell types, and the extensibility of PhysiCell with examples in synthetic multicellular systems (a “cellular cargo delivery” system, with application to anti-cancer treatments), cancer heterogeneity, and cancer immunology. PhysiCell is a powerful multicellular systems simulator that will be continually improved with new capabilities and performance improvements. It also represents a significant independent code base for replicating results from other simulation platforms. The PhysiCell source code, examples, documentation, and support are available under the BSD license at http://PhysiCell.MathCancer.org and http://PhysiCell.sf.net.
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spelling pubmed-58418292018-03-23 PhysiCell: An open source physics-based cell simulator for 3-D multicellular systems Ghaffarizadeh, Ahmadreza Heiland, Randy Friedman, Samuel H. Mumenthaler, Shannon M. Macklin, Paul PLoS Comput Biol Research Article Many multicellular systems problems can only be understood by studying how cells move, grow, divide, interact, and die. Tissue-scale dynamics emerge from systems of many interacting cells as they respond to and influence their microenvironment. The ideal “virtual laboratory” for such multicellular systems simulates both the biochemical microenvironment (the “stage”) and many mechanically and biochemically interacting cells (the “players” upon the stage). PhysiCell—physics-based multicellular simulator—is an open source agent-based simulator that provides both the stage and the players for studying many interacting cells in dynamic tissue microenvironments. It builds upon a multi-substrate biotransport solver to link cell phenotype to multiple diffusing substrates and signaling factors. It includes biologically-driven sub-models for cell cycling, apoptosis, necrosis, solid and fluid volume changes, mechanics, and motility “out of the box.” The C++ code has minimal dependencies, making it simple to maintain and deploy across platforms. PhysiCell has been parallelized with OpenMP, and its performance scales linearly with the number of cells. Simulations up to 10(5)-10(6) cells are feasible on quad-core desktop workstations; larger simulations are attainable on single HPC compute nodes. We demonstrate PhysiCell by simulating the impact of necrotic core biomechanics, 3-D geometry, and stochasticity on the dynamics of hanging drop tumor spheroids and ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast. We demonstrate stochastic motility, chemical and contact-based interaction of multiple cell types, and the extensibility of PhysiCell with examples in synthetic multicellular systems (a “cellular cargo delivery” system, with application to anti-cancer treatments), cancer heterogeneity, and cancer immunology. PhysiCell is a powerful multicellular systems simulator that will be continually improved with new capabilities and performance improvements. It also represents a significant independent code base for replicating results from other simulation platforms. The PhysiCell source code, examples, documentation, and support are available under the BSD license at http://PhysiCell.MathCancer.org and http://PhysiCell.sf.net. Public Library of Science 2018-02-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5841829/ /pubmed/29474446 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005991 Text en © 2018 Ghaffarizadeh et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ghaffarizadeh, Ahmadreza
Heiland, Randy
Friedman, Samuel H.
Mumenthaler, Shannon M.
Macklin, Paul
PhysiCell: An open source physics-based cell simulator for 3-D multicellular systems
title PhysiCell: An open source physics-based cell simulator for 3-D multicellular systems
title_full PhysiCell: An open source physics-based cell simulator for 3-D multicellular systems
title_fullStr PhysiCell: An open source physics-based cell simulator for 3-D multicellular systems
title_full_unstemmed PhysiCell: An open source physics-based cell simulator for 3-D multicellular systems
title_short PhysiCell: An open source physics-based cell simulator for 3-D multicellular systems
title_sort physicell: an open source physics-based cell simulator for 3-d multicellular systems
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5841829/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29474446
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1005991
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