Mathematical modeling of clonal evolution illustrates that linear evolution requires natural selection to occur in large populations but can occur through drift in small populations. (A-C) Simulations of a Moran model with 1000 cells and with increasing selective strength (increasing probability to self-renew upon acquisition of a mutation, α). When α = 0, evolution is neutral, and all cells have equal probability to self-renew whether mutant or not. When α > 0, mutated cells have an increased probability to expand (ie, mutations increase their fitness). (A) Linearity indices at t = 100 for selective strengths α = 0, α = 0.05, and α = 0.1. (B) Final clone frequency for all remaining clones across all simulations at t = 100 for selective strengths α = 0, α = 0.05, and α = 0.1. (C) Representative examples of clonal evolution in these simulations. The text above indicates the numbers of cells remaining and the linearity index at the end of the simulation. (D-F) Simulations with neutral evolution (α = 0) for 100, 1000, and 5000 SCs. (D) Linearity indices at t =100 for 100, 1000, and 5000 SCs. (E) Final clone frequency for all remaining clones across all simulations at t = 100 for 100, 1000, and 5000 SCs. (F) Representative example of clonal evolution for 100 cells, and 1 example of an outlier with a high linearity index.
Figure 2.

Mathematical modeling of clonal evolution illustrates that linear evolution requires natural selection to occur in large populations but can occur through drift in small populations. (A-C) Simulations of a Moran model with 1000 cells and with increasing selective strength (increasing probability to self-renew upon acquisition of a mutation, α). When α = 0, evolution is neutral, and all cells have equal probability to self-renew whether mutant or not. When α > 0, mutated cells have an increased probability to expand (ie, mutations increase their fitness). (A) Linearity indices at t = 100 for selective strengths α = 0, α = 0.05, and α = 0.1. (B) Final clone frequency for all remaining clones across all simulations at t = 100 for selective strengths α = 0, α = 0.05, and α = 0.1. (C) Representative examples of clonal evolution in these simulations. The text above indicates the numbers of cells remaining and the linearity index at the end of the simulation. (D-F) Simulations with neutral evolution (α = 0) for 100, 1000, and 5000 SCs. (D) Linearity indices at t =100 for 100, 1000, and 5000 SCs. (E) Final clone frequency for all remaining clones across all simulations at t = 100 for 100, 1000, and 5000 SCs. (F) Representative example of clonal evolution for 100 cells, and 1 example of an outlier with a high linearity index.

or Create an Account

Close Modal
Close Modal