Publications by authors named "Ory E"

Levels of hydrogen peroxide are highly elevated in the breast tumor microenvironment compared to normal tissue. Production of hydrogen peroxide is implicated in the mechanism of action of many anticancer therapies. Several lines of evidence suggest hydrogen peroxide mediates breast carcinogenesis and metastasis, though the molecular mechanism remains poorly understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cytoskeletal remodeling in circulating tumor cells (CTCs) facilitates metastatic spread. Previous oncology studies examine sustained aberrant calcium (Ca) signaling and cytoskeletal remodeling scrutinizing long-term phenotypes such as tumorigenesis and metastasis. The significance of acute Ca signaling in tumor cells that occur within seconds to minutes is overlooked.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Post-translational modifications (PTMs) of the microtubule network impart differential functions across normal cell types and their cancerous counterparts. The removal of the C-terminal tyrosine of α-tubulin (deTyr-Tub) as performed by the tubulin carboxypeptidase (TCP) is of particular interest in breast epithelial and breast cancer cells. The recent discovery of the genetic identity of the TCP to be a vasohibin () coupled with a small vasohibin-binding protein () allows for the functional effect of this tubulin PTM to be directly tested for the first time.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Clinical cancer imaging typically looks at tumor growth instead of how tumors spread (metastasis), but this study shifts the focus to metastatic behaviors.
  • The drug Vinorelbine was shown to significantly reduce metastatic features like microtentacle formation and tumor cell clustering, extending metastatic survival in mice from 8 to 30 weeks without affecting primary tumor survival.
  • This research suggests that FDA-approved drugs targeting microtubules (like Vinorelbine) could potentially help prevent metastasis, highlighting a new avenue for cancer treatment that is often overlooked because of the current focus on tumor growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The development of chemoresistance to paclitaxel and carboplatin represents a major therapeutic challenge in ovarian cancer, a disease frequently characterized by malignant ascites and extrapelvic metastasis. Microtentacles (McTNs) are tubulin-based projections observed in detached breast cancer cells. In this study, we investigated whether ovarian cancers exhibit McTNs and characterized McTN biology.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Mammosphere assays help identify cancer-initiating stem cells that can form spheres in a lab setting, but traditional methods lead to cell clumping, making it hard to measure true efficiency.
  • A new technique using lipid anchors was developed to reduce cell aggregation while allowing for free-floating growth, improving the accuracy of monitoring mammosphere formation.
  • This method resulted in a significantly higher percentage of clonal mammospheres and better size correlation compared to traditional low-attachment approaches, indicating more reliable assay outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Changes in mechanical signals during tumor progression suggest potential therapeutic targets related to mechanotransduction.
  • Normal breast epithelial cells respond to mechanical stimuli with a two-part calcium signaling mechanism involving immediate calcium rise and prolonged influx driven by NADPH oxidase 2 and TRPM8 channels.
  • The presence of an oncogenic KRas mutation suppresses this calcium signaling, which may affect cancer cell responses in the tumor microenvironment and predict poor outcomes in certain breast cancer patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The technical challenges of imaging non-adherent tumor cells pose a critical barrier to understanding tumor cell responses to the non-adherent microenvironments of metastasis, like the bloodstream or lymphatics. In this study, we optimized a microfluidic device (TetherChip) engineered to prevent cell adhesion with an optically-clear, thermal-crosslinked polyelectrolyte multilayer nanosurface and a terminal lipid layer that simultaneously tethers the cell membrane for improved spatial immobilization. Thermal imidization of the TetherChip nanosurface on commercially-available microfluidic slides allows up to 98% of tumor cell capture by the lipid tethers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The mammosphere assay has become widely employed to quantify stem-like cells in a population. However, the problem is there is no standard protocol employed by the field. Cell seeding densities of 1,000 to 100,000 cells/mL have been reported.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aggressive cellular phenotypes such as uncontrolled proliferation and increased migration capacity engender cellular transformation, malignancy and metastasis. While genetic mutations are undisputed drivers of cancer initiation and progression, it is increasingly accepted that external factors are also playing a major role. Two recently studied modulators of breast cancer are changes in the cellular mechanical microenvironment and alterations in calcium homeostasis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

During metastasis, tumor cells dynamically change their cytoskeleton to traverse through a variety of non-adherent microenvironments, including the vasculature or lymphatics. Due to the challenges of imaging drift in non-adhered tumor cells, the dynamic cytoskeletal phenotypes are poorly understood. We present a new approach to analyze the dynamic cytoskeletal phenotypes of non-adhered cells that support microtentacles (McTNs), which are cell surface projections implicated in metastatic reattachment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The periphery of epithelial cells is shaped by opposing cytoskeletal physical forces generated predominately by two dynamic force generating systems-growing microtubule ends push against the boundary from the cell center, and the actin cortex contracts the attached plasma membrane. Here we investigate how changes to the structure and dynamics of the actin cortex alter the dynamics of microtubules. Current drugs target actin polymerization and contraction to reduce cell division and invasiveness; however, the impacts on microtubule dynamics remain incompletely understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Introduced to the U.S. market in late 2002 as a permanent method of contraception, a microinsert device is placed hysteroscopically into the fallopian tubes, not requiring incisions or general anesthesia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF