scholarly journals Sialyl Lewisx-P-selectin cascade mediates tumor–mesothelial adhesion in ascitic fluid shear flow

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shan-Shan Li ◽  
Carman K. M. Ip ◽  
Matthew Y. H. Tang ◽  
Maggie K. S. Tang ◽  
Yin Tong ◽  
...  
Soft Matter ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (47) ◽  
pp. 9528-9533 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing Jin ◽  
Kai Tang ◽  
Ying Xin ◽  
Tianlong Zhang ◽  
Youhua Tan

Tumor cells disseminate to distant organs mainly through blood circulation, where they experience considerable levels of fluid shear flow.


1999 ◽  
Vol 384 ◽  
pp. 183-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
RYOICHI KUROSE ◽  
SATORU KOMORI

The drag and lift forces acting on a rotating rigid sphere in a homogeneous linear shear flow are numerically studied by means of a three-dimensional numerical simulation. The effects of both the fluid shear and rotational speed of the sphere on the drag and lift forces are estimated for particle Reynolds numbers of 1[les ]Rep[les ]500.The results show that the drag forces both on a stationary sphere in a linear shear flow and on a rotating sphere in a uniform unsheared flow increase with increasing the fluid shear and rotational speed. The lift force on a stationary sphere in a linear shear flow acts from the low-fluid-velocity side to the high-fluid-velocity side for low particle Reynolds numbers of Rep<60, whereas it acts from the high-velocity side to the low-velocity side for high particle Reynolds numbers of Rep>60. The change of the direction of the lift force can be explained well by considering the contributions of pressure and viscous forces to the total lift in terms of flow separation. The predicted direction of the lift force for high particle Reynolds numbers is also examined through a visualization experiment of an iron particle falling in a linear shear flow of a glycerin solution. On the other hand, the lift force on a rotating sphere in a uniform unsheared flow acts in the same direction independent of particle Reynolds numbers. Approximate expressions for the drag and lift coefficients for a rotating sphere in a linear shear flow are proposed over the wide range of 1[les ]Rep[les ]500.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 4437-4437
Author(s):  
Laura Christine Kickham ◽  
Anthony M. McElligott ◽  
Adriele Prina-Mello ◽  
Elisabeth A. Vandenberghe ◽  
Yuri Volkov ◽  
...  

Abstract Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia (CLL) is a common B-lymphoid malignancy with over 200,000 people affected annually in Europe and the US. The aim of therapy is to increase the quality and duration of life using well tolerated treatment. Novel intracellular drug delivery systems such as functionalised nanoparticles (NPs), conjugated to antibodies such as anti-CD20 or anti-CD52 directed at cell surface markers may help address this need. We have explored the feasibility of targeting nanoparticles in CLL using a microfluidics based adhesion assay, anti CD52 cell targeting and Fludarabine therapy. Methods B cells were isolated from the peripheral blood of normal healthy donors and CLL patients. The CLL cell line, I-83, was maintained under standard conditions. Epifluorescent, laser scanning confocal and electron microscopy was utilised for imaging the interaction of metallic NPs with cells. The metallic NPs were polymer-coated for biocompatibility and cellular toxicity was assessed using flow cytometric analysis based on changes in light scattering. NPs distribution on the surface of the cells was visualized using epifluorescent and Helium ion microscopy, cellular uptake and alterations in cell morphology after NP treatment was imaged by confocal microscopy. Cell adhesion and migration behaviour under fluid shear flow conditions mimicking CLL cells in vivo was investigated using a microfluidics system utilising biochips coated with VCAM-1 and seeded with Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (HUVEC) or Human Dermal Lymphatic Endothelial Cells. CD52-Alexa Fluor® 633 was conjugated to the surface of silanized NPs (NP1) using standard carbo-diimide cross linker chemistry techniques and successful functionalisation of NPs was validated using flow cytometric analysis, monitoring a shift in fluorescent population. I-83 cells and patient-derived malignant B cells were treated using pH sensitive dye doped NPs and pH sensitive dye doped NP1 in order to assess interaction of nanoparticles with cells. Uptake measurements were performed through quantification of the fluorescence of the pH sensitive dye. As proof of concept, Fludarabine was then incorporated on to the surface of NPs in order to investigate its potential as a nanotherapeutic. Cytotoxicity studies were performed using flow cytometric analysis mentioned above following a 24 hour incubation. Results and Conclusions Quantitative and qualitative analysis identified uptake of NPs by normal and malignant B-lymphocytes with optimal NPs concentration for uptake determined at 25 μg/ml. Non-functionalised NPs in the range of 15-50nm were internalised by cells. There was a notable decrease in the interaction of NPs with cells under physiologically relevant fluid shear flow in comparison to static conditions, resulting in a corresponding decrease in uptake, highlighting the rationale for a CLL cell-targeted NP. The results of the adhesion experiment using I-83 cells and patient derived CLL cells to the HUVEC monolayer in a micro-fluidics system showed that patient CLL adhesion decreased after NP treatment (p=0.01, n=3). Cytotoxicity studies show that exposure to uncoated Fe2O3 nanoparticles yields an IC50 value of 23μg/mL +/- 5 μg/mL in comparison to coated, stabilized Fe2O3 nanoparticles with an IC50 of 49μg/mL +/- 5 μg/mL. Functionalisation of NPs with CD52 antibody (NP-1) resulted in significantly increased uptake (p<0.0001, n=3) and cytotoxicity. Preparation of these nanoparticles was reproducible and the particles remained stable in suspension for over 4 weeks. Cells treated with NPs bound Fludarabine were found to have significantly increased cytotoxicity in comparison to stabilized NPs (IC50 of 21μg/mL +/- 1μg/mL. In summary, this work provides proof of concept of efficacy for a targeted nanotherapeutic in haematological malignancies. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2007 ◽  
Vol 570 ◽  
pp. 155-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
KEN-ICHI SUGIOKA ◽  
SATORU KOMORI

Drag and lift forces acting on a spherical water droplet in a homogeneous linear shear air flow were studied by means of a three-dimensional direct numerical simulation based on a marker and cell (MAC) method. The effects of the fluid shear rate and the particle (droplet) Reynolds number on drag and lift forces acting on a spherical droplet were compared with those on a rigid sphere. The results show that the drag coefficient on a spherical droplet in a linear shear flow increases with increasing the fluid shear rate. The difference in the drag coefficient between a spherical droplet and a rigid sphere in a linear shear flow never exceeds 4%. The lift force acting on a spherical droplet changes its sign from a positive to a negative value at a particle Reynolds number of Rep ≃ 50 in a linear shear flow and it acts from the high-speed side to the low-speed side for Rep ≥ 50. The behaviour of the lift coefficient on a spherical droplet is similar to that on a stationary rigid sphere and the change of sign is caused by the decrease of the pressure lift. The viscous lift on a spherical droplet is smaller than that on a rigid sphere at the same Rep, whereas the pressure lift becomes larger. These quantitative differences are caused by the flow inside a spherical droplet.


2007 ◽  
Vol 361-363 ◽  
pp. 1157-1160
Author(s):  
Xiao Heng Liu ◽  
Hong Mei Yin ◽  
Yi Lai ◽  
Long Juan Xue

In present study a theoretical model was established to simulate the interaction between the adherent endothelial cell and fluid shear flow. A two-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was conducted to solve the model equations. The results showed that the model cell was deformed under steady shear flow. It spread along the flow direction, and decreased its height. The deformation index (DI) increased with Reynolds number of applied fluid flow. The DI of the cell increased greatly when the initial contact angle (α) was smaller than 130°, and then it was less important with the increase of α. These results suggest that the fluid shear flow may play a particular role in the mechanism of cell activation and in the regulation of endothelial cells functions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (21) ◽  
pp. 8115
Author(s):  
Ying Xin ◽  
Keming Li ◽  
Mo Yang ◽  
Youhua Tan

Tumor cells metastasize to distal organs mainly through hematogenous dissemination, where they experience considerable levels of fluid shear stress. Epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) plays a critical role in tumor metastasis. However, how fluid shear stress influences the EMT phenotype of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in suspension has not been fully understood. The role of shear-induced EMT in cell survival under blood shear flow remains unclear. This study shows that the majority of breast CTCs underwent apoptosis under shear flow and the surviving cells exhibited mesenchymal phenotype, suggesting that fluid shear stress induces EMT. Mechanistically, fluid shear stress-activated Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) signaling, inhibition/activation of which suppressed/promoted the EMT phenotype. In particular, shear flow facilitated the JNK-dependent transition of epithelial CTCs into the mesenchymal status and maintained the pre-existing mesenchymal cells. Importantly, the induction of EMT suppressed the pro-apoptosis gene p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis (PUMA) and enhanced the survival of suspended CTCs in fluid shear stress, which was rescued by overexpressing PUMA or silencing JNK signaling, suggesting that shear-induced EMT promotes CTC survival through PUMA downregulation and JNK activation. Further, the expressions of EMT markers and JUN were correlated with poor patient survival. In summary, our findings have demonstrated that fluid shear stress induces EMT in suspended CTCs via JNK signaling that promotes their survival in shear flow. This study thus unveils a new role of blood shear stress in CTC survival and facilitates the development of novel therapeutics against tumor metastasis.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 2509-2509
Author(s):  
Scott I Simon ◽  
Vasilios A Morikis ◽  
Shannon Chase ◽  
John L Magnani

Abstract Introduction: Mechanical force acting on selectin bonds facilitates neutrophil (PMN) rolling and transduction of signals that subsequently activate integrins that support cell arrest under hydrodynamic shear flow. E-selectin upregulated on inflamed endothelium has the unique capacity to bind multiple sialyl Lewisx (sLex) presenting ligands on circulating leukocytes to mediate slow rolling and activation of the β2 integrin- lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 (LFA-1), which in turn binds ICAM-1 during PMN arrest at sites of inflammation. It was demonstrated in a mouse model that PSGL-1 is the primary E-selectin ligand (ESL) that facilitates cell rolling. L-selectin/PSGL-1 clustering at the site of adhesive contact provides an outside-in signal that in turn activates LFA-1. A fundamental difference between mouse and human PMN with respect to ESL recognition is the biosynthesis of glycosylated ligands. Human L-selectin (CD62L) expresses N- and O- linked sLex that is recognized by the lectin domain of E-selectin, whereas mouse L-selectin is not decorated with sLex. We report that CD62L binding and clustering by E-selectin is necessary and sufficient to transduce signals that activate LFA-1, even in the absence of PSGL-1 engagement. Our study aims to elucidate how sLexexpressed on CD62L is preferentially bound by E-selectin and how tension induced clustering at sites of adhesive contact transduces integrin mediated PMN arrest. Recognition of CD62L can be selectively blocked by rivipansel (GMI-1070), a small molecule glycomimetic pan-selectin antagonist. Materials and Methods: PMN are perfused into a microfluidic device at 2 dynes/cm2 over a glass substrate coated with ICAM-1/E-selectin to mimic the inflamed vasculature and allow for quantification of rolling to arrest. Total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy employing quantitative dynamic footprinting (qDF) enables imaging of a membrane dye in conjunction with fluorescent antibodies to record cell adhesion and ligation of receptors by a molecular substrate. Rivipansel along with antibodies are used to block CD62L and PSGL-1 receptors. Fluorescent antibodies are used to image localization of receptors at the substrate. Immunoprecipitation of PMN lysates by E-selectin in presence or absence of antibody and rivipansel were followed up by Western blot analysis to identify their relative capacity to block recognition of CD62L versusPSGL-1. Results and Discussion: Isolated human PMN rolling to arrest was recorded on a substrate of recombinant human E-selectin/ICAM-1. Rivipansel inhibited PMN rolling at IC50 ~6.5µM, whereas antagonism of β2-integrin activation resulted in tenfold more potent activity with an IC50 ~0.5 μM. Blocking PSGL-1 with antibody did not alter this inhibition, indicating that it is not required for CD62L mediated outside-in signaling of β2-integrin dependent rolling to arrest. Western blots of PMN lysates immunoprecipitated against E- versus P-selectin revealed that rivipansel at 6.5 µM inhibits E-selectin recognition of sLex on CD62L by ~70%, while PSGL-1 binding was unaltered at this concentration. qDF imaging of the distribution of CD62L/PSGL-1 during human PMN rolling on E-selectin/ICAM-1 revealed that PSGL-1 was not necessary for tethering interactions of CD62L on E-selectin, nor signaling of integrin activation and arrest. Conclusions: E-selectin recognition of sLex expressed on CD62L is necessary and sufficient to generate outside-in signaling and activation of LFA-1 dependent arrest on ICAM-1. PSGL-1 contributes to PMN capture and rolling in shear flow, but is not requisite for conversion to arrest. Rivipansel binds tightly to the lectin domain on E-selectin and displaces sLex presented by CD62L, thereby preventing subsequent signal transduction associated with integrin activation and stable bond formation to ICAM-1. Blocking activation and arrest of leukocytes by rivipansel may play a central role in its reported clinical benefit in treatment of vaso-occlusive crisis in sickle cell patients. Disclosures Magnani: GlycoMimetics: Employment, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiawen Wang ◽  
Yi Wu ◽  
Xiao Zhang ◽  
Fan Zhang ◽  
Dongyuan Lü ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Distinct mechanical stimuli are known to manipulate the behaviors of embryonic stem cells (ESCs). Fundamental rationale of how ESCs respond to mechanical forces and the potential biological effects remain elusive. Here we conducted the mechanobiological study for hESCs upon mechanomics analysis to unravel typical mechanosensitive processes on hESC-specific fluid shear. Methods hESC line H1 was subjected to systematically varied shear flow, and mechanosensitive proteins were obtained by mass spectrometry (MS) analysis. Then, function enrichment analysis was performed to identify the enriched gene sets. Under a steady shear flow of 1.1 Pa for 24 h, protein expressions were further detected using western blotting (WB), quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR), and immunofluorescence (IF) staining. Meanwhile, the cells were treated with 200 nM trichostatin (TSA) for 1 h as positive control to test chromatin decondensation. Actin, DNA, and RNA were then visualized with TRITC-labeled phalloidin, Hoechst 33342, and SYTO® RNASelect™ green fluorescent cell stain (Life Technologies), respectively. In addition, cell stiffness was determined with atomic force microscopy (AFM) and annexin V-PE was used to determine the apoptosis with a flow cytometer (FCM). Results Typical mechanosensitive proteins were unraveled upon mechanomics analysis under fluid shear related to hESCs in vivo. Functional analyses revealed significant alterations in histone acetylation, nuclear size, and cytoskeleton for hESC under shear flow. Shear flow was able to induce H2B acetylation and nuclear spreading by CFL2/F-actin cytoskeletal reorganization. The resulting chromatin decondensation and a larger nucleus readily accommodate signaling molecules and transcription factors. Conclusions Shear flow regulated chromatin dynamics in hESCs via cytoskeleton and nucleus alterations and consolidated their primed state.


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