Author:
Au Sam H.,Storey Brian D.,Moore John C.,Tang Qin,Chen Yeng-Long,Javaid Sarah,Sarioglu A. Fatih,Sullivan Ryan,Madden Marissa W.,O’Keefe Ryan,Haber Daniel A.,Maheswaran Shyamala,Langenau David M.,Stott Shannon L.,Toner Mehmet
Abstract
Multicellular aggregates of circulating tumor cells (CTC clusters) are potent initiators of distant organ metastasis. However, it is currently assumed that CTC clusters are too large to pass through narrow vessels to reach these organs. Here, we present evidence that challenges this assumption through the use of microfluidic devices designed to mimic human capillary constrictions and CTC clusters obtained from patient and cancer cell origins. Over 90% of clusters containing up to 20 cells successfully traversed 5- to 10-μm constrictions even in whole blood. Clusters rapidly and reversibly reorganized into single-file chain-like geometries that substantially reduced their hydrodynamic resistances. Xenotransplantation of human CTC clusters into zebrafish showed similar reorganization and transit through capillary-sized vessels in vivo. Preliminary experiments demonstrated that clusters could be disrupted during transit using drugs that affected cellular interaction energies. These findings suggest that CTC clusters may contribute a greater role to tumor dissemination than previously believed and may point to strategies for combating CTC cluster-initiated metastasis.
Funder
HHS | NIH | National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering
HHS | NIH | NIH Office of the Director
Live Like Bella Foundation
Alex Lemonade Stand Foundation
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
384 articles.
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