• Counting cells may shed light on how can

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tue Sep 28 21:30:42 2021
    Counting cells may shed light on how cancer spreads

    Date:
    September 28, 2021
    Source:
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Summary:
    Engineers developed a technique that allows them to measure the
    generation rate and half-life of circulating tumor cells (CTCs)
    in mice.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    As tumors grow within an organ, they also release cells that enter the bloodstream. These cells can travel to other organs, seeding new tumors
    called metastases.


    ==========================================================================
    MIT engineers have now developed a technique that, for the first time,
    allows them to measure the generation rate of these circulating tumor
    cells (CTCs) in mice. Their approach, which also reveals how long CTCs
    survive once released into the bloodstream, could help scientists learn
    more about how different types of cancers spread through the body.

    "By exchanging blood between mice while counting CTCs in real-time, we
    obtained a direct measurement of how quickly CTCs enter the circulation
    and how long it takes before they're cleared," says Scott Manalis, the
    David H. Koch Professor of Engineering in the departments of Biological Engineering and Mechanical Engineering, a member of the Koch Institute
    for Integrative Cancer Research, and the senior author of the study.

    Using their new system, the researchers were able to study CTCs from
    pancreatic tumors as well as two types of lung tumors.

    Graduate student Alex Miller and Bashar Hamza PhD '20, a Koch Institute visiting scientist, are the lead authors of the paper, which appears
    today in Nature Communications.

    Capturing rare cells Circulating tumor cells are rare in patients: One milliliter of blood might contain between one and 10 such cells. In recent years, researchers have devised strategies to capture these elusive cells, which can yield a great deal of information about a patient's tumor,
    and even help doctors track how a tumor is responding to treatment.



    ========================================================================== "Circulating tumor cells are attractive because you can get them from
    blood and they provide a window into the tumor. It's a lot easier than biopsying the tumor," Manalis says.

    In mice, CTCs are even more difficult to find because mice only have
    a little more than 1 milliliter of blood. Being able to study CTCs in
    mice could help researchers answer many outstanding questions about
    how rapidly these cells are shed by tumors, how long they survive in circulation, and how efficiently they seed new tumors, Manalis says.

    To try to answer some of those questions, Manalis and his students
    designed a system that lets them remove blood from a mouse with a tumor
    and flow it into a healthy mouse. Through a separate tube, blood from
    the healthy mouse flows back to the tumor-bearing mouse. The system
    includes two cell-counters (one for each mouse) that detect and remove circulating tumor cells from the blood.

    Using this setup, the researchers can analyze all of the blood from each
    mouse in less than an hour. After determining the concentration of CTCs in
    the bloodstream of the tumor-bearing mouse and of the healthy mouse, they
    can calculate the rate at which CTCs are generated in the tumor-bearing
    mouse. They can also calculate the half-life of the cells -- a measure of
    how long they survive in the bloodstream before being cleared by the body.

    Working with members of the Jacks lab in the Koch Institute, the
    researchers used the system to study mice with three different types of
    tumors: pancreatic cancer, small cell lung cancer, and non-small cell
    lung cancer.



    ==========================================================================
    They found that the half-life of CTCs was fairly similar between the three types of tumors, with values ranging from 40 seconds to about 250 seconds.

    However, the generation rates showed much more variability between
    different tumor types. Small cell lung tumors, which are known to be aggressively metastatic, could shed more than 100,000 CTCs per hour,
    while non-small cell lung tumors and pancreatic tumors shed as few as
    60 CTCs per hour.

    Previous studies that relied on injecting tumor cells from cell lines cultivated in the lab have found that those cells had a half-life of
    only a few seconds in the bloodstream, but the new results from Manalis'
    lab suggest that endogenous CTCs actually persist much longer than that.

    Generating metastases The researchers also showed that the healthy mice
    that received CTCs later developed metastases, even after only exchanging
    a few thousand CTCs. They found that CTCs from small-cell lung tumors
    formed metastases in the livers of the recipient healthy mice, just as
    they did in the mice where the tumors originally formed.

    "What we realized was that these CTCs that we're injecting into the
    healthy recipient mouse start to grow and create metastases that we
    can detect after a couple of months," Hamza says. "That was exciting
    to observe because it validated that our blood-exchange technique can
    also be used to gently inject a viable CTC sample in its native blood environment without having to enrich it using harsh in vitro techniques."
    Using this approach, researchers now hope to study how different drug treatments influence CTC levels. "With this system, we can look at
    real-time concentration of CTCs, so we can perform a drug treatment
    and look at how it is affecting half-life time and generation rate,"
    Miller says.

    The researchers also plan to study other types of cancers, including
    blood cancers such as leukemias and lymphomas, using this system. The
    technique could also be used to study the circulation dynamics of other
    kinds of cells, including immune cells such as neutrophils and natural
    killer cells.

    The research was funded by the Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Fund for Cancer Research, the Cancer Systems Biology Consortium, the National Cancer
    Institute, the Pew-Stewart Scholars Program for Cancer Research, a Sloan Fellowship in Chemistry, and the National Institutes of Health.

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    Massachusetts_Institute_of_Technology. Original written by Anne
    Trafton. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Bashar Hamza, Alex B. Miller, Lara Meier, Max Stockslager, Sheng
    Rong Ng,
    Emily M. King, Lin Lin, Kelsey L. DeGouveia, Nolawit Mulugeta,
    Nicholas L. Calistri, Haley Strouf, Christina Bray, Felicia
    Rodriguez, William A.

    Freed-Pastor, Christopher R. Chin, Grissel C. Jaramillo, Megan
    L. Burger, Robert A. Weinberg, Alex K. Shalek, Tyler Jacks, Scott
    R. Manalis.

    Measuring kinetics and metastatic propensity of CTCs by blood
    exchange between mice. Nature Communications, 2021; 12 (1) DOI:
    10.1038/s41467- 021-25917-5 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/09/210928155116.htm

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