Existing clinical biomarkers do not reliably predict treatment response or disease progression in patients with advanced intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC). Circulating neoplastic-immune hybrid cells (CHCs) have great promise as a blood-based biomarker for patients with advanced ICC. Peripheral blood specimens were longitudinally collected from patients with advanced ICC enrolled in the HELIX-1 phase II clinical trial (NCT04251715).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCirculating hybrid cells (CHCs) are a newly discovered, tumor-derived cell population found in the peripheral blood of cancer patients and are thought to contribute to tumor metastasis. However, identifying CHCs by immunofluorescence (IF) imaging of patient peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) is a time-consuming and subjective process that currently relies on manual annotation by laboratory technicians. Additionally, while IF is relatively easy to apply to tissue sections, its application to PBMC smears presents challenges due to the presence of biological and technical artifacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCirculating hybrid cells (CHCs) are a newly discovered, tumor-derived cell population identified in the peripheral blood of cancer patients and are thought to contribute to tumor metastasis. However, identifying CHCs by immunofluorescence (IF) imaging of patient peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) is a time-consuming and subjective process that currently relies on manual annotation by laboratory technicians. Additionally, while IF is relatively easy to apply to tissue sections, its application on PBMC smears presents challenges due to the presence of biological and technical artifacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ability to cryopreserve bone marrow within the vertebral body (VB) would offer significant clinical and research benefits. However, cryopreservation of large structures, such as VBs, is challenging due to mass transport limitations that prevent the effective delivery of cryoprotectants into the tissue. To overcome this challenge, we examined the potential of vacuum infiltration, along with carbonation, to increase the penetration of cryoprotectants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIdentifying individual cells or nuclei is often the first step in the analysis of multiplex tissue imaging (MTI) data. Recent efforts to produce plug-and-play, end-to-end MTI analysis tools such as MCMICRO- though groundbreaking in their usability and extensibility - are often unable to provide users guidance regarding the most appropriate models for their segmentation task among an endless proliferation of novel segmentation methods. Unfortunately, evaluating segmentation results on a user's dataset without ground truth labels is either purely subjective or eventually amounts to the task of performing the original, time-intensive annotation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer stem cells (CSCs) are known to have a high capacity for tumor initiation and the formation of metastases. We have previously shown that in collagen constructs mimetic of aligned extracellular matrix architectures observed in carcinomas, breast CSCs demonstrate enhanced directional and total motility compared with more differentiated carcinoma populations. Here, we show that CSCs maintain increased motility in diverse environments including on 2D elastic polyacrylamide gels of various stiffness, 3D randomly oriented collagen matrices, and ectopic cerebral slices representative of a common metastatic site.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytoskeleton (Hoboken)
November 2019
Cell migration and traction are essential to many biological phenomena, and one of their key features is sensitivity to substrate stiffness, which biophysical models, such as the motor-clutch model and the cell migration simulator can predict and explain. However, these models have not accounted for the finite size of adhesions, the spatial distribution of forces within adhesions. Here, we derive an expression that relates varying adhesion radius ( R) and spatial distribution of force within an adhesion (described by s) to the effective substrate stiffness ( κ ), as a function of the Young's modulus of the substrate ( E ), which yields the relation, , for two-dimensional cell cultures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFive recipients of solid-organ transplants who were infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) were studied at the University of Minnesota, and our data were compared with data from 83 reported cases of HIV-infected recipients of solid organs from other centers. Sixty-six of the 88 patients were seronegative for HIV before transplantation and received organs or transfusions of blood from individuals who were seropositive for HIV. Seven patients (four recipients of kidney transplants and three recipients of liver transplants) received transplants after routine screening for HIV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Objective: To determine whether acyclovir administered orally affects the duration and severity of varicella in otherwise normal children.
Design: Randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial.
Setting: Patients' residence and university hospital clinic.