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Lipid tethering of breast tumor cells enables real-time imaging of free-floating cell dynamics and drug response.


ABSTRACT: Free-floating tumor cells located in the blood of cancer patients, known as circulating tumor cells (CTCs), have become key targets for studying metastasis. However, effective strategies to study the free-floating behavior of tumor cells in vitro have been a major barrier limiting the understanding of the functional properties of CTCs. Upon extracellular-matrix (ECM) detachment, breast tumor cells form tubulin-based protrusions known as microtentacles (McTNs) that play a role in the aggregation and re-attachment of tumor cells to increase their metastatic efficiency. In this study, we have designed a strategy to spatially immobilize ECM-detached tumor cells while maintaining their free-floating character. We use polyelectrolyte multilayers deposited on microfluidic substrates to prevent tumor cell adhesion and the addition of lipid moieties to tether tumor cells to these surfaces through interactions with the cell membranes. This coating remains optically clear, allowing capture of high-resolution images and videos of McTNs on viable free-floating cells. In addition, we show that tethering allows for the real-time analysis of McTN dynamics on individual tumor cells and in response to tubulin-targeting drugs. The ability to image detached tumor cells can vastly enhance our understanding of CTCs under conditions that better recapitulate the microenvironments they encounter during metastasis.

SUBMITTER: Chakrabarti KR 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4891134 | biostudies-other | 2016 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Lipid tethering of breast tumor cells enables real-time imaging of free-floating cell dynamics and drug response.

Chakrabarti Kristi R KR   Andorko James I JI   Whipple Rebecca A RA   Zhang Peipei P   Sooklal Elisabeth L EL   Martin Stuart S SS   Jewell Christopher M CM  

Oncotarget 20160301 9


Free-floating tumor cells located in the blood of cancer patients, known as circulating tumor cells (CTCs), have become key targets for studying metastasis. However, effective strategies to study the free-floating behavior of tumor cells in vitro have been a major barrier limiting the understanding of the functional properties of CTCs. Upon extracellular-matrix (ECM) detachment, breast tumor cells form tubulin-based protrusions known as microtentacles (McTNs) that play a role in the aggregation  ...[more]

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