Literature DB >> 10818635

Adhesion of nonmetastatic and highly metastatic breast cancer cells to endothelial cells exposed to shear stress.

M S Moss1, B Sisken, S Zimmer, K W Anderson.   

Abstract

The mechanical stimulus of shear stress has to date been neglected when studying the adhesion of cancer cells to the endothelium. Confluent monolayers of endothelial cells were subjected to either 4 or 15 hours of arterial shear stress. Adhesion of nonmetastatic (MCF-7) and highly metastatic (MDA-MB-435) human breast cancer cells was then quantified using a detachment assay carried out inside the parallel plate flow chamber. Four hours of shear stress exposure had no effect on adhesion. However, 15 hours of shear stress exposure led to marked changes in the ability of the endothelial monolayer to bind human breast cancer cells. An increase in adhesive strength was observed for nonmetastatic MCF-7 cells, while a decrease in adhesive strength was observed for highly metastatic MDA-MB-435 cells. Hence, endothelial shear stress stimulation does influence the adhesion of cancer cells to the endothelium and can have different effects on the adhesion of cancer cells with different metastatic potentials. Furthermore, adhesion of nonmetastatic and highly metastatic human breast cancer cells may be controlled by two different endothelial cell adhesion molecules that are differentially regulated by shear stress. Immunohistochemistry confirmed that shear stress did in fact differentially regulate endothelial cell adhesion molecule expression.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10818635

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biorheology        ISSN: 0006-355X            Impact factor:   1.875


  4 in total

1.  An intravital model to monitor steps of metastatic tumor cell adhesion within the hepatic microcirculation.

Authors:  Jörg Haier; Timo Korb; Birgit Hotz; Hans-Ullrich Spiegel; Norbert Senninger
Journal:  J Gastrointest Surg       Date:  2003 May-Jun       Impact factor: 3.452

2.  Analysis of adhesion kinetics of cancer cells on inflamed endothelium using a microfluidic platform.

Authors:  Taylor J Thompson; Bumsoo Han
Journal:  Biomicrofluidics       Date:  2018-06-08       Impact factor: 2.800

Review 3.  Micro and Nano-Scale Technologies for Cell Mechanics.

Authors:  Mustafa Unal; Yunus Alapan; Hao Jia; Adrienn G Varga; Keith Angelino; Mahmut Aslan; Ismail Sayin; Chanjuan Han; Yanxia Jiang; Zhehao Zhang; Umut A Gurkan
Journal:  Nanobiomedicine (Rij)       Date:  2014-01-01

Review 4.  Review: Mechanotransduction in ovarian cancer: Shearing into the unknown.

Authors:  Caymen Novak; Eric Horst; Geeta Mehta
Journal:  APL Bioeng       Date:  2018-06-07
  4 in total

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