epithelial tumor cells
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorothea Sonja Schott ◽  
Monika Pizon ◽  
Erika Schill ◽  
Katharina Pachmann

Abstract Solid tumors are notorious for their ability to form lethal metastases, sometimes several decades following initial cancer diagnosis. Development of distant metastases is a result of the primary tumor shedding cells that travel via lymphatics and the blood to distant sites where they can form metastases. Platelets are known to specifically enhance tumor cells’ survival in the bloodstream by as yet poorly understood mechanisms. To study the interplay of platelets with circulating tumor cells, we implemented our published approach to label both circulating epithelial tumor cells and platelets. Blood samples were collected avoiding fixation from patients with non-metastatic cancer diagnoses and processed at 4 time points following blood collection. Circulating epithelial tumor cells were undetectable directly after blood collection but became visible after overnight storage at room temperature presumably due to release of platelets from the tumor cells. Our results suggest that platelets play a key role in masking circulating tumor cells. Masking may explain the difficulties in detection of these cells and prevention of their elimination by the immune system. Our unmasking approach detects sufficient numbers of circulating tumor cells to monitor the effect on blood tumor cells of different therapeutic measures, thus contributing to improved systemic therapies for cancer.


2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 3507-3524
Author(s):  
Matthias Mäurer ◽  
Katharina Pachmann ◽  
Thomas Wendt ◽  
Dorothea Schott ◽  
Andrea Wittig

Circulating epithelial tumor cells (CETC) are considered to be responsible for the formation of metastases. Therefore, their importance as prognostic and/or predictive markers in breast cancer is being intensively investigated. Here, the reliability of single cell expression analyses in isolated and collected CETC from whole blood samples of patients with early-stage breast cancer before and after radiotherapy (RT) using the maintrac® method was investigated. Single-cell expression analyses were performed with qRT-PCR on a panel of selected genes: GAPDH, EpCAM, NANOG, Bcl-2, TLR 4, COX-2, PIK3CA, Her-2/neu, Vimentin, c-Met, Ki-67. In all patients, viable CETC were detected prior to and at the end of radiotherapy. In 7 of the 9 (77.8%) subjects examined, the CETC number at the end of the radiotherapy series was higher than before. The majority of genes analyzed showed increased expression after completion of radiotherapy compared to baseline. Procedures and methods used in this pilot study proved to be feasible. The method is suitable for further investigation of the underlying molecular biological mechanisms occurring in cells surviving radiotherapy and possibly the development of radiation resistance.


Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 2553 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian H. Jun ◽  
Tianqi Guo ◽  
Sarah Libring ◽  
Monica K. Chanda ◽  
Juan Sebastian Paez ◽  
...  

Tumor metastasis is connected to epithelial-mesenchymal heterogeneity (EMH) and the extracellular matrix (ECM) within the tumor microenvironment. Mesenchymal-like fibronectin (FN) expressing tumor cells enhance metastasis within tumors that have EMH. However, the secondary tumors are primarily composed of the FN null population. Interestingly, during tumor cell dissemination, the invasive front has more mesenchymal-like characteristics, although the outgrowths of metastatic colonies consist of a more epithelial-like population of cells. We hypothesize that soluble FN provided by mesenchymal-like tumor cells plays a role in supporting the survival of the more epithelial-like tumor cells within the metastatic niche in a paracrine manner. Furthermore, due to a lower rate of proliferation, the mesenchymal-like tumor cells become a minority population within the metastatic niche. In this study, we utilized a multi-parametric cell-tracking algorithm and immunoblotting to evaluate the effect of EMH on the growth and invasion of an isogenic cell series within a 3D collagen network using a microfluidic platform. Using the MCF10A progression series, we demonstrated that co-culture with FN-expressing MCF10CA1h cells significantly enhanced the survival of the more epithelial MCF10CA1a cells, with a two-fold increase in the population after 5 days in co-culture, whereas the population of the MCF10CA1a cells began to decrease after 2.5 days when cultured alone (p < 0.001). However, co-culture did not significantly alter the rate of proliferation for the more mesenchymal MCF10CA1h cells. Epithelial tumor cells not only showed prolonged survival, but migrated significantly longer distances (350 µm compared with 150 µm, respectively, p < 0.01) and with greater velocity magnitude (4.5 µm/h compared with 2.1 µm/h, respectively, p < 0.001) under co-culture conditions and in response to exogenously administered FN. Genetic depletion of FN from the MCF10CA1h cells resulted in a loss of survival and migration capacity of the epithelial and mesenchymal populations. These data suggest that mesenchymal tumor cells may function to support the survival and outgrowth of more epithelial tumor cells within the metastatic niche and that inhibition of FN production may provide a valuable target for treating metastatic disease.


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