Wilkie2013r - immune-induced cancer dormancy and immune evasion-resistance

Model Identifier
BIOMD0000000752
Short description
The paper describes a model of immune-induced cancer dormancy and immune evasion with resistance.
Created by COPASI 4.25 (Build 207)
This model is described in the article:
Mathematical models of immune-induced cancer dormancy and the emergence of immune evasion
Kathleen P. Wilkie and Philip Hahnfeldt
Interface Focus 3: 20130010
Abstract:
Cancer dormancy, a state in which cancer cells persist in a host without sig- nificant growth, is a natural forestallment of progression to manifest disease and is thus of great clinical interest. Experimental work in mice suggests that in immune-induced dormancy, the longer a cancer remains dormant in a host, the more resistant the cancer cells become to cytotoxic T-cell-mediated killing. In this work, mathematical models are used to analyse the possible causative mechanisms of cancer escape from immune-induced dormancy. Using a data-driven approach, both decaying efficacy in immune predation and immune recruitment are analysed with results suggesting that decline in recruitment is a stronger determinant of escape than increased resistance to predation. Using a mechanistic approach, the existence of an immune- resistant cancer cell subpopulation is considered, and the effects on cancer dormancy and potential immunoediting mechanisms of cancer escape are analysed and discussed. The immunoediting mechanism assumes that the immune system selectively prunes the cancer of immune-sensitive cells, which is shown to cause an initially heterogeneous population to become a more homogeneous, and more resistant, population. The fact that this selec- tion may result in the appearance of decreasing efficacy in T-cell cytotoxic effect with time in dormancy is also demonstrated. This work suggests that through actions that temporarily delay cancer growth through the targeted removal of immune-sensitive subpopulations, the immune response may actually progress the cancer to a more aggressive state.
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Format
SBML
(L3V1)
Related Publication
-
Mathematical models of immune-induced cancer dormancy and the emergence of immune evasion.
- Wilkie KP, Hahnfeldt P
- Interface focus , 8/ 2013 , Volume 3 , Issue 4 , pages: 20130010 , PubMed ID: 24511375
- Center of Cancer Systems Biology, GRI, Saint Elizabeth's Medical Center , Tufts University School of Medicine , 736 Cambridge Street, CBR1, Boston, MA 02135 USA.
- Cancer dormancy, a state in which cancer cells persist in a host without significant growth, is a natural forestallment of progression to manifest disease and is thus of great clinical interest. Experimental work in mice suggests that in immune-induced dormancy, the longer a cancer remains dormant in a host, the more resistant the cancer cells become to cytotoxic T-cell-mediated killing. In this work, mathematical models are used to analyse the possible causative mechanisms of cancer escape from immune-induced dormancy. Using a data-driven approach, both decaying efficacy in immune predation and immune recruitment are analysed with results suggesting that decline in recruitment is a stronger determinant of escape than increased resistance to predation. Using a mechanistic approach, the existence of an immune-resistant cancer cell subpopulation is considered, and the effects on cancer dormancy and potential immunoediting mechanisms of cancer escape are analysed and discussed. The immunoediting mechanism assumes that the immune system selectively prunes the cancer of immune-sensitive cells, which is shown to cause an initially heterogeneous population to become a more homogeneous, and more resistant, population. The fact that this selection may result in the appearance of decreasing efficacy in T-cell cytotoxic effect with time in dormancy is also demonstrated. This work suggests that through actions that temporarily delay cancer growth through the targeted removal of immune-sensitive subpopulations, the immune response may actually progress the cancer to a more aggressive state.
Contributors
Submitter of the first revision: Jinghao Men
Submitter of this revision: Jinghao Men
Modellers: Jinghao Men
Submitter of this revision: Jinghao Men
Modellers: Jinghao Men
Metadata information
is (2 statements)
isDescribedBy (1 statement)
hasTaxon (1 statement)
isVersionOf (1 statement)
hasProperty (1 statement)
isDescribedBy (1 statement)
hasTaxon (1 statement)
isVersionOf (1 statement)
hasProperty (1 statement)
Curation status
Curated
Modelling approach(es)
Tags
Connected external resources
Name | Description | Size | Actions |
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Model files |
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Wilkie2013r.xml | SBML L3V1 representation of the tumour-immune model with resistance | 43.74 KB | Preview | Download |
Additional files |
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Wilkie2013r.cps | CPS file of the model in COPASI | 60.15 KB | Preview | Download |
Wilkie2013r.sedml | Auto-generated SEDML file | 2.60 KB | Preview | Download |
- Model originally submitted by : Jinghao Men
- Submitted: Jul 17, 2019 11:31:16 AM
- Last Modified: Jul 17, 2019 11:31:16 AM
Revisions
Legends
: Variable used inside SBML models
: Variable used inside SBML models
Species
Species | Initial Concentration/Amount |
---|---|
C malignant cell |
9000.0 mmol |
I Effector Immune Cell |
100.0 mmol |
R malignant cell |
1000.0 mmol |
Reactions
Reactions | Rate | Parameters |
---|---|---|
=> C; R | tumor_microenvironment*a*C*(1-(C+R)/K) | a = 0.2 1; K = 1.0E10 1 |
=> I; C, R | tumor_microenvironment*y*I*(1-I/(Ie+u*(C+0.001*R)*I)) | y = 0.2 1; Ie = 100.0 1; u = 0.001 1 |
R => ; I | tumor_microenvironment*b0*R*I | b0 = 1.0E-4 1 |
C => ; I | tumor_microenvironment*a0*C*I | a0 = 1.0E-4 1 |
=> R; C | tumor_microenvironment*b*R*(1-(R+C)/K) | K = 1.0E10 1; b = 0.2 1 |
Curator's comment:
(added: 17 Jul 2019, 11:30:51, updated: 17 Jul 2019, 11:30:51)
(added: 17 Jul 2019, 11:30:51, updated: 17 Jul 2019, 11:30:51)
Publication figure 7a reproduced as per literature. Other parts of figure 7 are reproduced with different values of f. Other figures are reproduced in the basic model. Figure data is generated using COPASI 4.25 (build 197).