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arxiv: 0709.0443 · v1 · submitted 2007-09-04 · 🧬 q-bio.PE · q-bio.CB

Similar self-organizing scale-invariant properties characterize early cancer invasion and long range species spread

classification 🧬 q-bio.PE q-bio.CB
keywords spreadcancerdispersalprocessesspeciesearlyepidemicsinvasion
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Occupancy of new habitats through dispersion is a central process in nature. In particular, long range dispersal is involved in the spread of species and epidemics, although it has not been previously related with cancer invasion, a process that involves spread to new tissues. We show that the early spread of cancer cells is similar to the species individuals spread and that both processes are represented by a common spatio-temporal signature, characterized by a particular fractal geometry of the boundaries of patches generated, and a power law-scaled, disrupted patch size distribution. We show that both properties are a direct result of long-distance dispersal, and that they reflect homologous ecological processes of population self-organization. Our results are significant for processes involving long-range dispersal like biological invasions, epidemics and cancer metastasis.

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