Multiple naphthol ligands were installed on the glycocalyx of white blood cells via metabolic labeling and subsequent strain promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition. Only when cucurbit[8]uril was present to drive the formation of ternary complexes, cells specifically assembled on a methylviologen functionalized supported lipid bilayer through multivalent interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFControl over particle size and composition are pivotal to tune the properties of metal organic frameworks (MOFs), for example, for biomedical applications. Particle-size control and functionalization of MIL-88A were achieved by using stoichiometric replacement of a small fraction of the divalent fumarate by monovalent capping ligands. A fluorine-capping ligand was used to quantify the surface coverage of capping ligand at the surface of MIL-88A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTumor cell migration is a key process for cancer cell dissemination and metastasis that is controlled by signal-mediated cytoskeletal and cell matrix adhesion remodeling. Using a phagokinetic track assay with migratory H1299 cells, we performed an siRNA screen of almost 1,500 genes encoding kinases/phosphatases and adhesome- and migration-related proteins to identify genes that affect tumor cell migration speed and persistence. Thirty candidate genes that altered cell migration were validated in live tumor cell migration assays.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell migration, essential in cancer progression, is a complex process comprising a number of spatiotemporally regulated and well-coordinated mechanisms. In order to study (random) cell migration in the context of responses to various external cues (such as growth factors) or intrinsic cell signaling, a number of different tools and approaches have been developed. In order to unravel the key pathways and players involved in the regulation of (cancer) cell migration, a systematical mapping of the players/pathways is required.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn the last decade, intravital microscopy on breast tumours in mice at single-cell resolution has resulted in important new insight into mechanisms of metastatic behaviour such as migration, invasion, and intravasation of tumour cells; angiogenesis; and the response of immune cells. This chapter describes the methods that can be used for analysing tumour cell motility in a mouse model of breast cancer metastasis. It includes protocols for generation of a labelled primary tumour, its imaging with two-photon microscopy, and the processing of time-lapse image data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe occurrence of metastases is a critical determinant of the prognosis for breast cancer patients. Effective treatment of breast cancer metastases is hampered by a poor understanding of the mechanisms involved in the formation of these secondary tumor deposits. To study the processes of metastasis, valid in vivo tumor metastasis models are required.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLamellipodial protrusion and directional migration of carcinoma cells towards chemoattractants, such as epidermal growth factor (EGF), depend upon the spatial and temporal regulation of actin cytoskeleton by actin-binding proteins (ABPs). It is generally hypothesized that the activity of many ABPs are temporally and spatially regulated by PIP(2); however, this is mainly based on in vitro-binding and structural studies, and generally in vivo evidence is lacking. Here, we provide the first in vivo data that directly visualize the spatial and temporal regulation of cofilin by PIP(2) in living cells.
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