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Mechanical properties of growing melanocytic nevi and the progression to melanoma

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)

Author

A. Taloni
A.A. Alemi
E. Ciusani
J.P. Sethna
S. Zapperi
C.A.M. La Porta

Abstract

Melanocytic nevi are benign proliferations that sometimes turn into malignant melanoma in a way that is still unclear from the biochemical and genetic point of view. Diagnostic and prognostic tools are then mostly based on dermoscopic examination and morphological analysis of histological tissues. To investigate the role of mechanics and geometry in the morpholgical dynamics of melanocytic nevi, we study a computation model for cell proliferation in a layered non-linear elastic tissue. Numerical simulations suggest that the morphology of the nevus is correlated to the initial location of the proliferating cell starting the growth process and to the mechanical properties of the tissue. Our results also support that melanocytes are subject to compressive stresses that fluctuate widely in the nevus and depend on the growth stage. Numerical simulations of cells in the epidermis releasing matrix metalloproteinases display an accelerated invasion of the dermis by destroying the basal membrane. Moreover, we suggest experimentally that osmotic stress and collagen inhibit growth in primary melanoma cells while the effect is much weaker in metastatic cells. Knowing that morphological features of nevi might also reflect geometry and mechanics rather than malignancy could be relevant for diagnostic purposes. © 2014 Taloni et al.

Date Published

Journal

PLoS ONE

Volume

9

Issue

4

URL

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84899464897&doi=10.1371%2fjournal.pone.0094229&partnerID=40&md5=464ee639c06000dff47ce2eddcc14672

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0094229

Research Area

Group (Lab)

James Sethna Group

Funding Source

PHY-0941095
PHY-1066293
U54CA143876

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