PLoS Computational Biology (Mar 2024)

Metabolic symbiosis between oxygenated and hypoxic tumour cells: An agent-based modelling study.

  • Pahala Gedara Jayathilake,
  • Pedro Victori,
  • Clara E Pavillet,
  • Chang Heon Lee,
  • Dimitrios Voukantsis,
  • Ana Miar,
  • Anjali Arora,
  • Adrian L Harris,
  • Karl J Morten,
  • Francesca M Buffa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011944
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 3
p. e1011944

Abstract

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Deregulated metabolism is one of the hallmarks of cancer. It is well-known that tumour cells tend to metabolize glucose via glycolysis even when oxygen is available and mitochondrial respiration is functional. However, the lower energy efficiency of aerobic glycolysis with respect to mitochondrial respiration makes this behaviour, namely the Warburg effect, counter-intuitive, although it has now been recognized as source of anabolic precursors. On the other hand, there is evidence that oxygenated tumour cells could be fuelled by exogenous lactate produced from glycolysis. We employed a multi-scale approach that integrates multi-agent modelling, diffusion-reaction, stoichiometric equations, and Boolean networks to study metabolic cooperation between hypoxic and oxygenated cells exposed to varying oxygen, nutrient, and inhibitor concentrations. The results show that the cooperation reduces the depletion of environmental glucose, resulting in an overall advantage of using aerobic glycolysis. In addition, the oxygen level was found to be decreased by symbiosis, promoting a further shift towards anaerobic glycolysis. However, the oxygenated and hypoxic populations may gradually reach quasi-equilibrium. A sensitivity analysis using Latin hypercube sampling and partial rank correlation shows that the symbiotic dynamics depends on properties of the specific cell such as the minimum glucose level needed for glycolysis. Our results suggest that strategies that block glucose transporters may be more effective to reduce tumour growth than those blocking lactate intake transporters.