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Biophysical analysis of fluid shear stress induced cellular deformation in a microfluidic device. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Despite effective primary therapies for breast cancer, many patients experience relapses with metastatic disease, where cancer spreads and currently has no cure.
  • Circulating tumor cells (CTCs), which are cancer cells that enter the bloodstream, face unique forces like fluid shear stress (FSS) that potentially make them more aggressive; however, their individual responses to FSS haven't been thoroughly quantified before.
  • A microfluidic method was used to better isolate and analyze the responses of two breast cancer cell lines (MDA-MB-231 and MCF7) to controlled FSS, revealing that while both cell types became more deformable with increased FSS, they showed notable differences in how they responded over time, indicating the presence of diverse cell subpop

Article Abstract

Even though the majority of breast cancers respond well to primary therapy, a large percentage of patients relapse with metastatic disease, for which there is no treatment. In metastasis, a tumor sheds a small number of cancerous cells, termed circulating tumor cells (CTCs), into the local vasculature, from where they spread throughout the body to form new tumors. As CTCs move through the circulatory system, they experience physiological forces not present in the initial tumor environment, namely, fluid shear stress (FSS). Evidence suggests that CTCs respond to FSS by adopting a more aggressive phenotype; however, to date single-cell morphological changes have not been quantified to support this observation. Furthermore, the methodology of previous studies involves inducing FSS by flowing cells through the tubing, which lacks a precise and tunable control of FSS. Here, a microfluidic approach is used for isolating and characterizing the biophysical response of single breast cancer cells to conditions experienced in the circulatory system during metastasis. To evaluate the single-cell response of multiple breast cancer types, two model circulating tumor cell lines, MDA-MB-231 and MCF7, were challenged with FSS at precise magnitudes and durations. As expected, both MDA-MB-231 and MCF7 cells exhibited greater deformability due to increasing duration and magnitudes of FSS. However, wide variations in single-cell responses were observed. MCF7 cells were found to rapidly deform but reach a threshold value after 5 min of FSS, while MDA-MB-231 cells were observed to deform at a slower rate but with a larger threshold of deformation. This behavioral diversity suggests the presence of distinct cell subpopulations with different phenotypes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6192794PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5063824DOI Listing

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