Skip to main content
Analytical Cellular Pathology: the Journal of the European Society for Analytical Cellular Pathology logoLink to Analytical Cellular Pathology: the Journal of the European Society for Analytical Cellular Pathology
. 1997 Jan 1;14(2):75–86. doi: 10.1155/1997/183028

Topographical Analysis of Spatial Patterns Generated by a Cellular Automaton Model of the Proliferation of a Cancer Cell Line In Vitro

Jacqueline Palmari 1, Bruno Lafon 2, Pierre Marie Martin 2, Christophe Dussert 2
PMCID: PMC4612273  PMID: 9313823

Abstract

A well‐suited model to simulate cellular population dynamics is the two‐dimensional cellular automaton model, which consists of a lattice of sites, the value ai,j of each site being updated in discrete time steps according to an identical deterministic rule depending on a neighbourhood of sites around it. A cellular automaton is described which mimics cell population proliferation by replacing the site values by the age and the cycle phase of cells. The model takes into account the size of the cells. It is used to simulate the proliferation of the human breast cancer cell line MCF‐7 and the results of the simulation are compared with experimental data obtained from a light microscopic image analysis of the proliferation process. The initial configuration of the cellular automaton is obtained from the discretization of the results of the initial stage of the image processing. After each day of proliferation the pattern obtained from the simulation is compared to the experimental result of the corresponding image analysis. The comparison is made from a topographical point of view through the concept of the minimal spanning tree graph. The agreement between experiment and model is a good starting point to complex models such as cell proliferation under growth effectors or drugs.

Keywords: Cellular automaton, image analysis, minimal spanning tree graph, cancer cell proliferation


Articles from Analytical Cellular Pathology : the Journal of the European Society for Analytical Cellular Pathology are provided here courtesy of Wiley

RESOURCES