Chivukula Venkat Keshav, Krog Benjamin L, Nauseef Jones T, Henry Michael D, Vigmostad Sarah C
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Iowa, Seamans Center for the Engineering Arts and Sciences, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Iowa, Seamans Center for the Engineering Arts and Sciences, Iowa City, IA, USA ; Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Holden Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Iowa, Seamans Center for the Engineering Arts and Sciences, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Cell Health Cytoskelet. 2015 Jan 9;7:25-35. doi: 10.2147/CHC.S71852.
Over 90% of cancer deaths result not from primary tumor development, but from metastatic tumors that arise after cancer cells circulate to distal sites via the circulatory system. While it is known that metastasis is an inefficient process, the effect of hemodynamic parameters such as fluid shear stress (FSS) on the viability and efficacy of metastasis is not well understood. Recent work has shown that select cancer cells may be able to survive and possibly even adapt to FSS in vitro. The current research seeks to characterize the effect of FSS on the mechanical properties of suspended cancer cells in vitro. Nontransformed prostate epithelial cells (PrEC LH) and transformed prostate cancer cells (PC-3) were used in this study. The Young's modulus was determined using micropipette aspiration. We examined cells in suspension but not exposed to FSS (unsheared) and immediately after exposure to high (6,400 dyn/cm) and low (510 dyn/cm) FSS. The PrEC LH cells were ~140% stiffer than the PC-3 cells not exposed to FSS. Post-FSS exposure, there was an increase of ~77% in Young's modulus after exposure to high FSS and a ~47% increase in Young's modulus after exposure to low FSS for the PC-3 cells. There was no significant change in the Young's modulus of PrEC LH cells post-FSS exposure. Our findings indicate that cancer cells adapt to FSS, with an increased Young's modulus being one of the adaptive responses, and that this adaptation is specific only to PC-3 cells and is not seen in PrEC LH cells. Moreover, this adaptation appears to be graded in response to the magnitude of FSS experienced by the cancer cells. This is the first study investigating the effect of FSS on the mechanical properties of cancer cells in suspension, and may provide significant insights into the mechanism by which some select cancer cells may survive in the circulation, ultimately leading to metastasis at distal sites. Our findings suggest that biomechanical analysis of cancer cells could aid in identifying and diagnosing cancer in the future.
超过90%的癌症死亡并非源于原发性肿瘤的发展,而是源于癌细胞通过循环系统转移至远端部位后形成的转移性肿瘤。虽然已知转移是一个低效的过程,但诸如流体剪切应力(FSS)等血流动力学参数对转移的生存能力和效力的影响尚未得到充分理解。最近的研究表明,某些癌细胞在体外可能能够存活,甚至可能适应FSS。当前的研究旨在表征FSS对体外悬浮癌细胞力学性能的影响。本研究使用了未转化的前列腺上皮细胞(PrEC LH)和转化的前列腺癌细胞(PC-3)。通过微量吸管吸取法测定杨氏模量。我们检查了未暴露于FSS(未剪切)的悬浮细胞,以及在暴露于高(6400达因/平方厘米)和低(510达因/平方厘米)FSS后立即进行检查。未暴露于FSS的PrEC LH细胞比PC-3细胞硬约140%。对于PC-3细胞,暴露于FSS后,高FSS暴露后杨氏模量增加约77%,低FSS暴露后杨氏模量增加约47%。PrEC LH细胞暴露于FSS后杨氏模量无显著变化。我们的研究结果表明,癌细胞适应FSS,杨氏模量增加是适应性反应之一,并且这种适应仅特定于PC-3细胞,在PrEC LH细胞中未观察到。此外,这种适应似乎是根据癌细胞所经历的FSS大小分级的。这是第一项研究FSS对悬浮癌细胞力学性能影响的研究,可能为某些特定癌细胞在循环中存活并最终导致远端部位转移的机制提供重要见解。我们的研究结果表明,对癌细胞的生物力学分析可能有助于未来癌症的识别和诊断。