Numerous experimental studies have demonstrated that the microenvironment is a key regulator influencing the proliferative and migrative potentials of species. Spatial and temporal disturbances lead to adverse and hazardous microenvironments for cellular systems that is reflected in the phenotypic heterogeneity within the system. In this paper, we study the effect of microenvironment on the invasive capability of species, or mutants, on structured grids (in particular, square lattices) under the influence of site-dependent random proliferation in addition to a migration potential. We discuss both continuous and discrete fitness distributions. Our results suggest that the invasion probability is negatively correlated with the variance of fit...
<p>Parameters: Lattice size = 21×21, <i>r</i><sub><i>A</i></sub> = 1.0, <i>m</i><sub><i>A</i></sub> ...
Competition is ubiquitous in microbial communities, shaping both their spatial and temporal structur...
The unwelcome evolution of malignancy during cancer progression emerges through a selection process ...
<p>(a) Random distribution of two types of sites with high and low fitness’s for mutant cells. (b) E...
In this work we discuss a spatial evolutionary model for a heterogeneous cancer cell population. We ...
Background: We study the selection dynamics in a heterogeneous spatial colony of cells. We use two s...
<p>Parameters: Lattice size = 21×21, <i>r</i><sub><i>A</i></sub> = 1.0, 〈<i>r</i><sub><i>B</i></sub>...
Populations in spatially structured environments may be divided into a number of (semi-) isolated su...
Spatial heterogeneity greatly affects the population spread. Although the theory for biolo...
In this paper we analyse stochastic models of the competition between two resource-limited cell popu...
We consider a spatial (line) model for invasion of a population by a single mutant with a stochastic...
We consider spatial population dynamics on a lattice, following a type of a contact (birth–death) st...
Mutant dynamics in fragmented populations have been studied extensively in evolutionary biology. Yet...
The interplay between space and evolution is an important issue in population dynamics, that is part...
Fixation probability, the probability that the frequency of a newly arising mutation in a population...
<p>Parameters: Lattice size = 21×21, <i>r</i><sub><i>A</i></sub> = 1.0, <i>m</i><sub><i>A</i></sub> ...
Competition is ubiquitous in microbial communities, shaping both their spatial and temporal structur...
The unwelcome evolution of malignancy during cancer progression emerges through a selection process ...
<p>(a) Random distribution of two types of sites with high and low fitness’s for mutant cells. (b) E...
In this work we discuss a spatial evolutionary model for a heterogeneous cancer cell population. We ...
Background: We study the selection dynamics in a heterogeneous spatial colony of cells. We use two s...
<p>Parameters: Lattice size = 21×21, <i>r</i><sub><i>A</i></sub> = 1.0, 〈<i>r</i><sub><i>B</i></sub>...
Populations in spatially structured environments may be divided into a number of (semi-) isolated su...
Spatial heterogeneity greatly affects the population spread. Although the theory for biolo...
In this paper we analyse stochastic models of the competition between two resource-limited cell popu...
We consider a spatial (line) model for invasion of a population by a single mutant with a stochastic...
We consider spatial population dynamics on a lattice, following a type of a contact (birth–death) st...
Mutant dynamics in fragmented populations have been studied extensively in evolutionary biology. Yet...
The interplay between space and evolution is an important issue in population dynamics, that is part...
Fixation probability, the probability that the frequency of a newly arising mutation in a population...
<p>Parameters: Lattice size = 21×21, <i>r</i><sub><i>A</i></sub> = 1.0, <i>m</i><sub><i>A</i></sub> ...
Competition is ubiquitous in microbial communities, shaping both their spatial and temporal structur...
The unwelcome evolution of malignancy during cancer progression emerges through a selection process ...