Literature DB >> 22176732

Developing a multiscale, multi-resolution agent-based brain tumor model by graphics processing units.

Le Zhang1, Beini Jiang, Yukun Wu, Costas Strouthos, Phillip Zhe Sun, Jing Su, Xiaobo Zhou.   

Abstract

Multiscale agent-based modeling (MABM) has been widely used to simulate Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) and its progression. At the intracellular level, the MABM approach employs a system of ordinary differential equations to describe quantitatively specific intracellular molecular pathways that determine phenotypic switches among cells (e.g. from migration to proliferation and vice versa). At the intercellular level, MABM describes cell-cell interactions by a discrete module. At the tissue level, partial differential equations are employed to model the diffusion of chemoattractants, which are the input factors of the intracellular molecular pathway. Moreover, multiscale analysis makes it possible to explore the molecules that play important roles in determining the cellular phenotypic switches that in turn drive the whole GBM expansion. However, owing to limited computational resources, MABM is currently a theoretical biological model that uses relatively coarse grids to simulate a few cancer cells in a small slice of brain cancer tissue. In order to improve this theoretical model to simulate and predict actual GBM cancer progression in real time, a graphics processing unit (GPU)-based parallel computing algorithm was developed and combined with the multi-resolution design to speed up the MABM. The simulated results demonstrated that the GPU-based, multi-resolution and multiscale approach can accelerate the previous MABM around 30-fold with relatively fine grids in a large extracellular matrix. Therefore, the new model has great potential for simulating and predicting real-time GBM progression, if real experimental data are incorporated.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22176732      PMCID: PMC3312859          DOI: 10.1186/1742-4682-8-46

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Theor Biol Med Model        ISSN: 1742-4682            Impact factor:   2.432


Background

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common and aggressive brain cancer [1,2]. Statistics show that it has the worst prognosis of all central nervous system malignancies [3,4]. However, with the resolution of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) [5,6], currently limited to around 2-3 mm, even the most experienced clinical personnel cannot accurately forecast GBM progression. The difficulties of making such forecasts motivated computational biologists to develop multiscale mathematical models to explore the expansion and invasion of GBM [7-9]. Cancer behaves as a complex, dynamic, adaptive and self-organizing system [10], and agent-based models (ABM) are capable of describing such a system as a collection of autonomous and decision-making agents, which represent the cells. Therefore, computational biologists hope that with the ABM approach they can surpass the current limitations of imaging technology and predict tumor progression [11-16]. Our previous studies [15,16] developed various multiscale ABMs to simulate GBM progression. In these models, a cell's intracellular epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling pathway is stimulated by a chemoattractant (such as transforming growth factor α (TGFα)), which diffuses at the tissue level. We also assumed that the transient rate of change of phospholipase Cγ (PLCγ ), an important molecule in the EGFR pathway, will result in cancer cell migration, whereas a smooth rate of change of PLCγ will result in cancer cell proliferation [11,12,15,16]. At the intercellular scale, the behaviors of cells (such as the autocrine or paracrine secretion of chemoattractants and migration or proliferation phenotypes) remodel the tumor microenvironment and affect the overall tumor dynamics at the tissue level. An important advantage of multiscale agent-based modeling (MABM) [15,16] is that we can employ multiscale analysis to investigate the incoherent connections among various scales. For example, we can depict the intracellular (molecular) profiles that lead to phenotypic switches at any cell's dynamic cross points (migration cell number crosses with proliferation cell number) [15] or in the interesting tumor regions [16]. Thus, MABM models [15-17] can be used as tools for generating experimentally testable hypotheses. The consequent validation experiments may reveal potential therapeutic targets. Though MABM approaches have a great potential for investigating GBM progression, their complexity necessitates immense computational resources [15,17], which becomes forbidding for real-time simulations of spatio-temporal GBM progression. In fact, two problems prevent MABM doing real-time simulation. The first is that the computation time required for intracellular pathway computing for cancer cells will become huge, since a real cancer system may consist of millions of cells. The second is that it is impossible to employ a conventional sequential numerical solver to model the real-time diffusion of chemoattractants in a large extracellular matrix (ECM) with relatively fine grids. To overcome the computation time problems, this study incorporates a graphics processing unit (GPU)-based parallel computing algorithm [18] into a multi-resolution design [16] to speed up the previous MABM [15,17]. The multi-resolution design [16] classified the cancer cells into heterogeneous and homogeneous clusters. The heterogeneous clusters consisted of migrating and proliferating cancer cells in the region of interest, whereas the homogeneous clusters comprised dead or quiescent cells. The limited computational resource was concentrated on the heterogeneous clusters to investigate the molecular profiles of migrating and proliferating cancer cells, while the quiescent and dead cells in the homogeneous clusters were treated with less of the resource. The GPU-based parallel computing algorithm can not only model the diffusion of chemoattractants in a large ECM with relatively fine grids in real time, but also process computing queries concerning the intracellular signaling pathways of millions of cancer cells in a real cancer progression system. The results presented in this paper demonstrate that the GPU-based multi-resolution MABM has certain novel features that can help cancer scientists to explore the mechanism of GBM cancer progression. First, it is able to simulate real-time cancer progression in a large ECM with relatively fine grids. Second, since multiscale analysis [15,17] can reveal the correlations between GBM tumor progression and molecular concentration changes, we can tell which molecular species are the important biomarkers that impact tumor progression. Third, a multi-resolution design [16] not only allows us to visualize cancer progression by displaying all the cancer cell clusters in the tissue, but also enables us to track each cancer cell's trajectory. In the following sections, we will introduce the previously-developed multiscale and multi-resolution ABM, describe how to use GPU to accelerate the simulation of the model, and finally illustrate the advantages of the model that can be used to analyze important biomarkers to inhibit GBM expansion and predict GBM progression.

Mathematical model

Multiscale perspective

The multiscale approach was incorporated into ABMs to simulate GBM progression by incorporating into the model the interactions between different scales - the intracellular (gene-protein interaction) and the cellular (including cell-cell interactions and phenotypic switches e.g. from migration to proliferation and vice versa) - which in turn affect the spatio-temporal evolution of GBM (tissue scale). The relationships among the intracellular, cellular and tissue scales were conceptually defined as "interfaces". As indicated in Figure 1: (a) A cell's phenotype is defined as an interface between the intracellular and intercellular levels. The signaling pathway at intracellular level determines the cell's phenotype, which regulates intercellular behaviors. (b) We denote the diffusion of chemoattractants as an interface between the intercellular and tissue levels. At the tissue level, cells secrete chemoattractants that diffuse according to their concentration gradients and remodel the microenvironment of the tumor. (c) A cell's pathway receptors are defined as an interface between tissue and intracellular level. The paracrine or autocrine effects of chemoattractants on the tissue level are sensed by cellular receptors and trigger intracellular signaling pathways to determine a cell's phenotype.
Figure 1

Multiscale model of GBM growth.

Multiscale model of GBM growth.

Intracellular scale

At the intracellular scale, the model employs a system of ordinary differential equations (ODEs) to describe the intracellular EGFR molecular pathway (Figure 2) shown in equation 1.
Figure 2

Intracellular .

Intracellular . where Xis the mass of ith molecule of the implemented EGFR signaling network, and αand βare respectively the rates of synthesis and degradation of that molecule. The details of equation 1 are listed in Table 1[16].
Table 1

[16] - (1) Components of the EGFR gene-protein interaction network, (2) Kinetic equations employed to describe the reactions between the EGFR species, (3) Coefficients of the EGFR gene-protein interaction network taken from the literature

(1)
SymbolMolecular variablesInitial Condition

X0Glucose25mM

X1TGFα9010.55nM

X2EGFR100nM

X3TGFα -EGFR0nM

X4(TGFα -EGFR)20nM

X5TGFα -EGFR-P0nM

X6PLCγ10nM

X7TGFα-EGFR-PLCγ0nM

X8TGFα-EGFR-PLCγ-P0nM

X9PLCγ-P0nM

X10PLCγ-P-I0nM

(2)

dX1/dt=-v1(1)v1 = k1X1X2-k-1X3(11)

dX2/dt=-v1(2)v2 = k2X3X3-k-2X4(12)

dX3/dt = v1-2v2(3)v3 = k3X4-k-3X5(13)

dX4/dt = v2+v4-v3(4)v4 = V4X5/(K4+X5)(14)

dX5/dt = v3+v7-v4-v5(5)v5 = k5X5X6-k-5X7(15)

dX6/dt = v8-v5(6)v6 = k6X7-k-6X8(16)

dX7/dt = v5-v6(7)v7 = k7X8-k-7X5X9(17)

dX8/dt = v6-v7(8)v8 = V8X9(K8+X9)(18)

dX9/dt = v7-v8-v9(9)v9 = k9X9-k-9X10(19)

dX10/dt = v9(10)

(3)

Forward rate (s-1)Reverse rate (s-1)Michaelis constants (nM)Maximal enzyme rates (nM s-1)

k1 = 0.003k-1 = 0.06K4 = 50V4 = 450

k2 = 0.01k-2 = 0.1K8 = 100V8 = 1

k3 = 1k-3 = 0.01

K5 = 0.06k-5 = 0.2

K6 = 1k-6 = 0.05

K7 = 0.3k-7 = 0.006

k9 = 1k-9 = 0.03
[16] - (1) Components of the EGFR gene-protein interaction network, (2) Kinetic equations employed to describe the reactions between the EGFR species, (3) Coefficients of the EGFR gene-protein interaction network taken from the literature Giese et al. [19] indicated that a GBM cell will not migrate and proliferate at the same time (known as the proliferation-migration dichotomy). In addition, Dittmar et al. [20] reported that a transient increase in phospholipase Cγ (PLCγ) results in (breast) cancer cell migration. Therefore, we assumed [11,12,15] that once the rate of change of a GBM cell's phosphorylated PLCγ exceeds the average rate of change of phosphorylated PLCγ in cells switching phenotype, the cell becomes migratory; otherwise, it adopts the proliferative phenotype. These conditions for a phenotypic switch are represented by equation 2. where denotes the rate of change of phosphorylated PLCγ concentration, and Avg describes the average rate of change of phosphorylated PLCγ of cells switching phenotype at the time step.

Intercellular scale

A discrete module is employed to simulate a cell's intercellular behaviors. At each time step, a cell will choose the location with highest attraction value to migrate or spawn its off-spring. This process is represented by equation 3 [9,15,17,21]. where Tdenotes the attractiveness of location (i,j), Eis the concentration of TGFα at location (i,j), and ε~N[μ,σ] is an error term that is normally distributed with mean μ and variance σ. The parameter Ψ takes on a positive value between zero and one and represents the precision of search. Here we choose Ψ = 0.7 on the basis of previous works [9,13,15,17].

Tissue scale

The chemoattractant diffusion in the tissue is modeled by the diffusion equation 4. where Y is the concentration of chemoattractant, D is the diffusivity of chemoattractant, t is the time step, and U and S are respectively the cell's chemoattractant uptake and secretion rates. In general, the multiscale approach incorporates three different scales: intracellular, intercellular and tissue. The intracellular gene-protein interaction pathway affects the intercellular scale by determining a cell's phenotype. In turn, the chemoattractants diffusing at the tissue level affect both the intracellular and tissue scales by stimulating a cell's molecular pathway and remodeling the tumor cells' microenvironment. An important advantage of the multiscale ABM approach is that it can be used to analyze and expose the incoherent relations among the different scales. Such analysis may result in experimentally testable hypotheses. However, owing to the complexity of these types of models, real-time simulations of systems with realistic sizes are extremely difficult because forbiddingly huge computation is required. For example, it took approximately seven computing hours on a high performance CPU (IBM Bladecenter machine, dual-processor, 32-bit Xeons ranging from 2.8-3.2 GHz, 2.5 GB RAM, and Gigabit Ethernet) to simulate approximately twenty thousand cells (final state) in a 100*100*100 extracellular matrix with relatively coarse grids (around 20 μm) for 20 days [15,17]. Therefore, a realistic in vitro tumor simulation with millions of cells on relatively fine grids would require an immense simulation time. To minimize the simulation time and simulate real-time cancer progression, a multi-resolution design [21] was incorporated into the multiscale ABM.

Multi-resolution perspective

A multi-resolution design is used to relieve the huge computational resource demand of MABM and visualize tumor progression at various resolutions. In this approach, more computational resource is allocated to heterogeneous regions of the cancer and less to homogeneous regions. In summary, the aim of the multi-resolution approach is to reduce the simulation computing time by sacrificing the accuracy of the simulated results compared with the original MABM. To implement the multi-resolution design, a double resolution lattice is developed [16] as in Figure 3. The low resolution lattice size spacing is set to 62.5 μm, which is equal to the smallest unit of the hemocytometer [22] used in experiments. A high-resolution grid with a lattice spacing of 10 μm (approximately equal to a GBM cell diameter) is superimposed on the low resolution grid. Here, we define a cell cluster as a group of cells located at a grid point of the low resolution lattice. If cells occupy all the locations of the high resolution lattice affiliated with the grid point of the low resolution lattice, this cell cluster is denoted as a dense cluster.
Figure 3

Configuration of coupled high-resolution and low-resolution lattices.

Configuration of coupled high-resolution and low-resolution lattices. Each cancer cell is classified as belong to either a heterogeneous or a homogeneous cluster. Described by Figure 4, only the profile of a cell belonging to a heterogeneous cluster is computed to determine its phenotype switch [16]. Cancer cells in the homogeneous clusters are treated as a single big 'cell'. The classification method is as follows: if all the topographic neighborhoods of a dense cluster are themselves dense, then this cluster is deemed homogeneous; otherwise, it is heterogeneous. Since in the multi-resolution approach the intracellular molecular pathway is computed only for cells belonging to heterogeneous clusters to determine phenotypic switches, the overall computation time required for the simulation is significantly less than in the MABM. However, in a realistic cancer progression system, even the heterogeneous clusters of the multi-resolution approach will consist of millions of cells, implying that an enormous computational resource is required to process the cells' intracellular molecular pathways in real time. Furthermore, in order to simulate a realistic cancer progression system, we must employ relatively fine grids to model the tumor's microenvironment. This makes it hard to use current sequential PDE solvers to simulate the diffusion of chemoattractants. For these reasons, this study incorporated a GPU-based parallel computing algorithm into the multi-resolution MABM to accelerate both the ODE and PDE numerical solvers.
Figure 4

Multiscale and multi-resolution model.

Multiscale and multi-resolution model.

GPU-based parallel computing algorithm

A modern GPU is essentially a massively-parallel, explicitly programmable co-processor consisting of hundreds of programmable processors with a natural programming hierarchy [23]. This hierarchy can mimic the bottom-up organization of ABM models by setting the intracellular and intercellular scale computations at the bottom (communicating locally via the fast shared memory of the GPU) of the hierarchy on the GPU while coordinating the logic control module of the model on the CPU. Modern GPU programming is sufficiently flexible to take advantage of the multi-resolution design by dynamically focusing GPU computing resources on the currently heterogeneous regions of the cancer. Fermi GPUs (GTX 480) have up to 480 processors, which can be bundled together to provide thousands of individual GPU processors. This system can provide significant benefits towards scaling feasible MABM model computations, which help us to approach the target of simulating realistic tumor growth problems [23]. To speed up the current multi-resolution MABM, we parallelized both the chemoattractant diffusion module and the intracellular EGFR pathway module.

Speeding up the computation of the intracellular EGFR molecular pathway module

A GPU-based parallel ODE solver (Figure 5) was developed to process intensive computing queries from tens of thousands of GBM cells during simulations of tumor expansion. For cancer cells in the aforementioned heterogeneous clusters, equation 1 is used to determine a phenotypic switch. If we still use a sequential ODE solver to process the computation cell by cell in the heterogeneous clusters, it would be impossible to obtain the results in a reasonable time range. For example, it took around 25 seconds to run one step of ODE processing for 260 thousand cells with the sequential solver. The GPU-based ODE parallel computing algorithm can simultaneously process the computing queries for the cells in the heterogeneous clusters by assigning each cell a thread as shown in Figure 5, which results in a significant increase in the model's performance up to 5.2-fold. In this case, only global memory is employed to accelerate the computation.
Figure 5

Parallel .

Parallel .

Speeding up the diffusion module

Previous research [18] has already developed three GPU-based parallel algorithms to accelerate the numerical solution of the reaction-diffusion PDE equation (equation 4) by integrating an alternating direction scheme (ADI) [24], Thomas algorithm [24,25] and domain decomposition strategy [26,27], which were incorporated into the new features of GPU technology. The first approach is a parallel computing algorithm with global memory (PGM). The second is a parallel computing algorithm with shared memory, global memory and CPU synchronization [18,28-30] (PSGMC). The third is a parallel computing algorithm using shared memory, global memory and GPU synchronization [18,29,31] (PSGMG). PSGMC and PSGMG use a "tiles" strategy to decompose the data and utilize both global memory and shared memory with the classical alternating Schwarz domain-decomposition method [24,26,27,32,33]. Our recent publication [18] demonstrated that PSGMG (Figure 6[18]) is the fastest parallel algorithm for speeding up the numerical solver of the diffusion equation. Thus, this research employed PSGMG to accelerate the diffusion solver of MABM.
Figure 6

The flowchart of .

The flowchart of .

Results

Our code was written in Microsoft Visual Studio C++ [34,35] and NVCC [36] programming languages, We ran the simulation 10 times with different random number seeds (1-100 time steps, one time step being equivalent to one hour) on a Dell workstation with Fermi GeForce GTX 480 [37-39] and obtained the average result. The initial condition is described in Table 1.

Multiscale analysis

Relationship between the tumor cell population and switching molecular profile Figure 7 describes the population of tumor cells as a function of time, where red, blue and black represent migratory cells, proliferative cells and all the tumor cells, respectively. Since the cell cycle requires several time steps to switch a cell's phenotype, a marked change appears at around t = 25 . From Figure 7, we observed that the proliferation curve (blue) crossed the migration curve (red) at t = 27 and 36; moreover, both curves became flatter when approaching t = 100. As mentioned earlier [15,17], a multiscale analysis can be used to investigate the incoherent relationships between the cells' behaviors (phenotypic switches) and their intracellular molecular profiles. Such an investigation is presented in Figure 8, where we depict the concentrations of different molecules in the EGFR network at the three time points mentioned above when phenotypic switches from proliferation to migration or from migration to proliferation occur. In particular, Figure 8(a), (b) and 8(c) show the molecular profiles of cells that switch their phenotypes from proliferation to migration at time points 27, 36 and 100, respectively; Figure 8(d), (e) and 8(f) show the molecular profiles of cells that switch their phenotypes from migration to proliferation at time points 27, 36 and 100, respectively. We infer that the average percentage rates of change of X8 (TGFα-EGFR-PLCγ-P), X9 (PLCγ-P) and X10 (PLCγ-P-I) are larger than the average percentage rates of change of X1, X2, X3 and X6 (TGFα, EGFR, TGFα -EGFR and PLCγ). In the early time stages (time steps 27 and 36), the average percentage rates of change of the molecular species of cells switching their phenotype from proliferation to migration (Figure 8(a) and 8(b)) are significantly greater than the average percentage rates of change of the molecular species of cells switching their phenotype from migration to proliferation (Figure 8(d) and 8(e)). Also, a significant percentage rate of change of X9 (PLCγ-P) resulted in the phenotypic switch. However, the difference between these two molecular profiles (Figure 8(c) and 8(f)) is not as obvious at the final stage (t = 100) as in the early stages. In addition, a very trivial percentage rate of change of X9 (PLCγ-P) caused a phenotypic switch.
Figure 7

Population of tumor cells. The red color represents migratory cells, the blue represents proliferating cells and the black represents all the tumor cells. The x axis represents the time step and the y axis represents the total number of tumor cells.

Figure 8

Molecular profile of . Molecular profile of The x axis represents the components of the EGFR gene-protein interaction network and the average percentage rate of change of each component is represented by heatmaps. (Note: PM = phenotypic switch from proliferation to migration; MP = phenotypic switch from migration to proliferation).

Population of tumor cells. The red color represents migratory cells, the blue represents proliferating cells and the black represents all the tumor cells. The x axis represents the time step and the y axis represents the total number of tumor cells. Molecular profile of . Molecular profile of The x axis represents the components of the EGFR gene-protein interaction network and the average percentage rate of change of each component is represented by heatmaps. (Note: PM = phenotypic switch from proliferation to migration; MP = phenotypic switch from migration to proliferation).

Advantages of the multi-resolution approach

Visualization of cancer progression at various resolutions

The multi-resolution MABM is capable of describing tumor progression at various resolutions. Figure 9 shows tumor progression in the low resolution lattice at time points 1, 27, 36 and 100. The black represents heterogeneous cell clusters and the green represents homogeneous cell clusters. We can already see from Figure 9 that the tumor has a core of homogeneous clusters and a rim of heterogeneous clusters. We can visualize the GBM cancer cells' behaviors in the high-resolution lattice at the same time steps. For example, we can choose any cluster and show each cell's phenotype and position in the cluster as shown in Figure 10. Here, red represents migratory cells, blue represents proliferating cells and green represents quiescent cells. Finally, we can track each cell's trajectory as shown in Figure 11, where we show the position of a single cell from time steps 1 to 100.
Figure 9

Tumor progression in the low resolution lattice at time steps . The black color represents heterogeneous cell clusters and the green color represents homogeneous cell clusters.

Figure 10

Cells' behavior on the high-resolution lattice at time steps . The red color represents migratory cells, the blue color represents proliferating cells, and green represents quiescent cells. The x and y axes represent the x- and y-coordinates of the grid points on the high-resolution lattice, respectively.

Figure 11

Trajectory of a single cell. The x axis represents the time step. The y and z axes represent the x- and y-coordinates of the grid points on the high-resolution lattice, respectively.

Tumor progression in the low resolution lattice at time steps . The black color represents heterogeneous cell clusters and the green color represents homogeneous cell clusters. Cells' behavior on the high-resolution lattice at time steps . The red color represents migratory cells, the blue color represents proliferating cells, and green represents quiescent cells. The x and y axes represent the x- and y-coordinates of the grid points on the high-resolution lattice, respectively. Trajectory of a single cell. The x axis represents the time step. The y and z axes represent the x- and y-coordinates of the grid points on the high-resolution lattice, respectively.

Speed-up of the multiscale and multi-resolution ABM by GPU

GPU-based MABM versus sequential MABM

Figure 12(a) shows that the GPU-based MABM is much faster than the sequential MABM model. It is clear from this figure that the parallelized code runs at least an order of magnitude faster than the sequential algorithm. In particular, the speedup is markedly increased with respect to the finer grids.
Figure 12

(a) Computation time of . The x-axis represents the high-resolution lattice size and the y-axis represents the computation time (logarithmic scale with base 10) in milliseconds. The blue bar represents the computation time of the sequential multiscale model and the red bar represents the computation time of GPU-based multiscale model. The number on each red bar indicates the speed of the parallelized algorithm divided by the speed of the sequential algorithm. (b) Computation time of . The x axis represents the high-resolution lattice size and y axis represents the computation time (logarithmic scale with base 10) in milliseconds. The blue bar represents the computation time of GPU-based multiscale model and the red bar represents the computation time of the GPU-based multiscale and multi-resolution model. The number on the red bar indicates the speed-up of the GPU-based multiscale model. (c) Computation time of . The x axis represents the total cell number and the y axis represents the computation time in milliseconds. The blue bar represents the computation time of the GPU-based multi-resolution and multi-scale model with only the PDE solver parallelized. The red bar represents the computation time of the GPU-based multi-resolution and multiscale model with both the ODE and PDE modules parallelized. The number on the red bar indicates the speed-up of the GPU-based multiscale and multi-resolution model with only the PDE module parallelized.

(a) Computation time of . The x-axis represents the high-resolution lattice size and the y-axis represents the computation time (logarithmic scale with base 10) in milliseconds. The blue bar represents the computation time of the sequential multiscale model and the red bar represents the computation time of GPU-based multiscale model. The number on each red bar indicates the speed of the parallelized algorithm divided by the speed of the sequential algorithm. (b) Computation time of . The x axis represents the high-resolution lattice size and y axis represents the computation time (logarithmic scale with base 10) in milliseconds. The blue bar represents the computation time of GPU-based multiscale model and the red bar represents the computation time of the GPU-based multiscale and multi-resolution model. The number on the red bar indicates the speed-up of the GPU-based multiscale model. (c) Computation time of . The x axis represents the total cell number and the y axis represents the computation time in milliseconds. The blue bar represents the computation time of the GPU-based multi-resolution and multi-scale model with only the PDE solver parallelized. The red bar represents the computation time of the GPU-based multi-resolution and multiscale model with both the ODE and PDE modules parallelized. The number on the red bar indicates the speed-up of the GPU-based multiscale and multi-resolution model with only the PDE module parallelized.

GPU-based multi-resolution MABM versus GPU-based MABM

The GPU-based MABM is accelerated further when the multi-resolution design is incorporated into it. Figure 12(b) shows that the GPU-based multi-resolution MABM has a better performance than the GPU-based MABM.

Speeding up the multi-resolution MABM model with a large cell population

As indicated in Figure 12(b), the GPU-based parallelized ODE solver cannot exhibit its advantage in significantly increasing the performance of the code when the cell population is small, because the diffusion module consumes most of the computational resource. However, Figure 12(c) demonstrates that as the tumor cell number increases on a 514 by 514 high-resolution lattice, the GPU-based parallelized ODE can significantly increase the performance of the model.

Discussion and Conclusions

Recently, a variety of cancer research reports have indicated that the EGFR pathway plays an important role in the directional motility [40-42], mitogenic signaling [43,44] and phenotypic switching of cancer cells [20,45]. In particular, Dittmar et al. [20] demonstrated that PLCγ , a molecular species in the EGFR downstream pathway [46,47], is transiently activated in breast cancer cells to a greater extent during migration. In addition, experimental observations of GBM suggested that at the same time interval, migrating tumor cells seldom proliferate and proliferating cells seldom migrate [19]. On the basis of these experimental results, Athale et al. [11] assumed that if the percentage rate of change of the phosphorylated PLCγ concentration exceeds a pre-specified threshold, GBM cells will migrate; otherwise, they will proliferate. Using this assumption, Athale et al. [11,12] and Zhang et al. [15] developed several in silico 2D and 3D MABMs to investigate how perturbations in the intracellular EGFR gene-protein network affect the progression of the entire tumor at the intercellular and tissue scales. However, the above works [11,12,15] were limited by the available computational resources. As indicated by previous research [16], simulating 3D cell growth with an ABM model is very time consuming. Scale-up analysis showed that one such simulation would take about 40 days with an IBM Bladecenter machine (dual-processor, 32-bit Xeons ranging from 2.8-3.2 GHz, 2.5 GB RAM, and Gigabit Ethernet), which is practically impossible. This limitation prevents simulation using MABMs from modeling more realistic large cancer systems. Therefore, the present research incorporated GPU-based parallel computing algorithms combined with a multi-resolution design into a multiscale ABM to simulate real-time actual GBM cancer progression. The in silico results demonstrated that our GPU-based multi-resolution MABM can be used not only to investigate the incoherent relationships among various scales during cancer progression and visualize tumor progression at different resolutions, but also to overcome the computational resource shortage problem and simulate actual cancer progression in real time. As is well known, computer simulations of complex agent-based systems result in various emergent behaviors due to non-linear interactions among the agents, which in our case are the cancer cells. Similarly, the multiscale analysis of our simulation results revealed various emergent findings. First, the molecular profiles of cells switching phenotypes from proliferation to migration (PM) and from migration to proliferation (MP) have very similar patterns (Figure 8). Second, we found that X8 (TGFα-EGFR-PLCγ-P) and X10 (PLCγ-P-I) correlated strongly with the rate of change of X9 (PLCγ-P), which determined the cell's phenotypic switch (Equation 2), whereas X1 (TGFα), X2 (EGFR), X3 (TGFα -EGFR) and X6 (PLCγ) were independent of the rate of change of X9 (PLCγ-P). Third, at early time stages, a high percentage rate of change of PLCγ caused the cell's phenotype to switch from proliferation to migration and a comparatively low percentage rate of change in PLCγ caused a switch from migration to proliferation; but the difference in PLCγ between these two molecular profiles (MP and PM) was very small in the final simulation stage. It is noted that the simulation data are from a four day experiment, so we set the simulation duration at 100 hours. These findings imply that the external input (TGFα), the major stimulator of the EGFR pathway, cannot change the concentration of PLCγ substantially at the end stage of simulation. The multi-resolution design allowed us to visualize the tumor progression at various resolutions. Our simulated results revealed that the heterogeneous clusters consisting of cells with various phenotypes were always on the outer regions of the tumor. In addition, we were able to explore the cells' behavior in the heterogeneous clusters. Using a high resolution lattice we investigated the cells' positions and phenotypes at different time steps. Moreover, the multi-resolution design enabled us to track a cell's trajectory. We also showed that the performance of the model was significantly improved by employing GPU-based parallel computing algorithms. We showed that the parallelized algorithm (PSGMG) is much better than the sequential algorithm on large lattices or when the cell population is large. In summary, the simulation results demonstrated that the GPU-based multi-resolution MABM has great potential for simulating actual GBM tumor progression in real time. In the near future, we plan to incorporate more parameters from experiments into the model, which will enable us to simulate GBM progression patterns at various resolutions in a more realistic way. Such simulations will enable us to investigate molecular biomarkers that play an important role in inhibiting cancer expansion and predict real GBM progression. Subsequently, we plan to work with experimentalists to use actual data to validate the effectiveness of the model.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

LZ carried out the MABM studies, participated in the multi-resolution design and drafted the manuscript. BJ developed the GPU-based parallel computing algorithms and drafted the manuscript. YW, CS, PZS, JS and XZ did algorithm development and improved the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
  26 in total

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Authors:  Birgit Schoeberl; Claudia Eichler-Jonsson; Ernst Dieter Gilles; Gertraud Müller
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Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 34.870

5.  The collection of the motile population of cells from a living tumor.

Authors:  J B Wyckoff; J E Segall; J S Condeelis
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2000-10-01       Impact factor: 12.701

6.  Multi-scale, multi-resolution brain cancer modeling.

Authors:  Le Zhang; L Leon Chen; Thomas S Deisboeck
Journal:  Math Comput Simul       Date:  2009-03-01       Impact factor: 2.463

7.  Simulating the impact of a molecular 'decision-process' on cellular phenotype and multicellular patterns in brain tumors.

Authors:  Chaitanya Athale; Yuri Mansury; Thomas S Deisboeck
Journal:  J Theor Biol       Date:  2004-11-30       Impact factor: 2.691

8.  The impact of "search precision" in an agent-based tumor model.

Authors:  Yuri Mansury; Thomas S Deisboeck
Journal:  J Theor Biol       Date:  2003-10-07       Impact factor: 2.691

9.  Induction of cancer cell migration by epidermal growth factor is initiated by specific phosphorylation of tyrosine 1248 of c-erbB-2 receptor via EGFR.

Authors:  Thomas Dittmar; Anja Husemann; Yvonne Schewe; Jerzy-Roch Nofer; Bernd Niggemann; Kurt S Zänker; Burkhard H Brandt
Journal:  FASEB J       Date:  2002-09-19       Impact factor: 5.191

10.  Simulating Brain Tumor Heterogeneity with a Multiscale Agent-Based Model: Linking Molecular Signatures, Phenotypes and Expansion Rate.

Authors:  Le Zhang; Costas G Strouthos; Zhihui Wang; Thomas S Deisboeck
Journal:  Math Comput Model       Date:  2009-01-01
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  8 in total

Review 1.  Simulating cancer growth with multiscale agent-based modeling.

Authors:  Zhihui Wang; Joseph D Butner; Romica Kerketta; Vittorio Cristini; Thomas S Deisboeck
Journal:  Semin Cancer Biol       Date:  2014-05-02       Impact factor: 15.707

2.  High-Performance Host-Device Scheduling and Data-Transfer Minimization Techniques for Visualization of 3D Agent-Based Wound Healing Applications.

Authors:  N Seekhao; G Yu; S Yuen; J JaJa; L Mongeau; N Y K Li-Jessen
Journal:  PDPTA 19 (2019)       Date:  2019 Jul-Aug

3.  Strategies for efficient numerical implementation of hybrid multi-scale agent-based models to describe biological systems.

Authors:  Nicholas A Cilfone; Denise E Kirschner; Jennifer J Linderman
Journal:  Cell Mol Bioeng       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 2.321

Review 4.  Neural Vascular Mechanism for the Cerebral Blood Flow Autoregulation after Hemorrhagic Stroke.

Authors:  Ming Xiao; Qiang Li; Hua Feng; Le Zhang; Yujie Chen
Journal:  Neural Plast       Date:  2017-09-26       Impact factor: 3.599

5.  Hybrid multiscale modeling and prediction of cancer cell behavior.

Authors:  Mohammad Hossein Zangooei; Jafar Habibi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-08-28       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  High-Performance Agent-Based Modeling Applied to Vocal Fold Inflammation and Repair.

Authors:  Nuttiiya Seekhao; Caroline Shung; Joseph JaJa; Luc Mongeau; Nicole Y K Li-Jessen
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2018-04-12       Impact factor: 4.566

7.  Spatial pattern dynamics of 3D stem cell loss of pluripotency via rules-based computational modeling.

Authors:  Douglas E White; Melissa A Kinney; Todd C McDevitt; Melissa L Kemp
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2013-03-14       Impact factor: 4.475

8.  Developing a Novel Parameter Estimation Method for Agent-Based Model in Immune System Simulation under the Framework of History Matching: A Case Study on Influenza A Virus Infection.

Authors:  Tingting Li; Zhengguo Cheng; Le Zhang
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2017-12-01       Impact factor: 5.923

  8 in total

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