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W tym Artykule

  • Podsumowanie
  • Streszczenie
  • Wprowadzenie
  • Protokół
  • Wyniki
  • Dyskusje
  • Ujawnienia
  • Podziękowania
  • Materiały
  • Odniesienia
  • Przedruki i uprawnienia

Podsumowanie

We describe an approach to detect and capture invasive cell subpopulations in real-time. The experimental design uses Real-Time Cellular Analysis by monitoring changes in the electric impedance of cells. Invasive cancer, immune, endothelial or stromal cells in complex tissues can be captured, and the impact of co-cultures can be assessed.

Streszczenie

Invasion and metastatic spread of cancer cells are the major cause of death from cancer. Assays developed early on to measure the invasive potential of cancer cell populations typically generate a single endpoint measurement that does not distinguish between cancer cell subpopulations with different invasive potential. Also, the tumor microenvironment consists of different resident stromal and immune cells that alter and participate in the invasive behavior of cancer cells. Invasion into tissues also plays a role in immune cell subpopulations fending off microorganisms or eliminating diseased cells from the parenchyma and endothelial cells during tissue remodeling and angiogenesis. Real-Time Cellular Analysis (RTCA) that utilizes impedance biosensors to monitor cell invasion was a major step forward beyond endpoint measurement of invasion: this provides continuous measurements over time and thus can reveal differences in invasion rates that are lost in the endpoint assay. Using current RTCA technology, we expanded dual-chamber arrays by adding a further chamber that can contain stromal and/or immune cells and allows measuring the rate of invasion under the influence of secreted factors from co-cultured stromal or immune cells over time. Beyond this, the unique design allows for detaching chambers at any time and isolating of the most invasive cancer cell, or other cell subpopulations that are present in heterogeneous mixes of tumor isolates tested. These most invasive cancer cells and other cell subpopulations drive malignant progression to metastatic disease, and their molecular characteristics are important for in-depth mechanistic studies, the development of diagnostic probes for their detection, and the assessment of vulnerabilities. Thus, the inclusion of small- or large-molecule drugs can be used to test the potential of therapies that target cancer and/or stromal cell subpopulations with the goal of inhibiting (e.g., cancer cells) or enhancing (e.g., immune cells) invasive behavior.

Wprowadzenie

Cell invasion is an important process that allows cells to cross basement membrane barriers in response to environmental cues provided by stromal cells. It is a crucial step during several stages of development for immune responses, wound healing, tissue repair, and malignancies that can progress from local lesions to invasive and metastatic cancers1. Assays developed early on to measure the invasive potential of cell populations typically generate a single endpoint measurement or require pre-labeling of invasive cells2. The integration of microelectronics and microfluidics techniques is now developed to detect different aspects of cell biology such as viability, movement, and attachment using the electric impedance of live cells on microelectrodes3,4. Impedance measurement allows for a label-free, non-invasive and quantitative assessment of cell status3. Here we describe a three-chambered array based on the design of the Real-Time Cellular Analysis (RTCA) system that was developed by Abassi et al.5. The three-chambered array allows for the assessment of co-cultured cells on cellular invasion and recovery of invasive cells for additional analyses or expansion.

In the cell analyzer system, cells invade through an extracellular matrix coated onto a porous membrane and reach an interdigitated electrode array positioned on the opposite side of the barrier. As the invasive cells continue to attach and occupy this electrode array over time, the electrical impedance changes in parallel. The current system comprises a cell invasion and migration (CIM) 16-well plate with two chambers. The RTCA-DP (dual purpose) (called dual purpose cell analyzer henceforth) instrument contains sensors for impedance measurement and integrated software to analyze and process the impedance data. Impedance values at baseline depend on the ionic strength of media in the wells and are changed as cells attach to the electrodes. The impedance changes depend on the number of cells, their morphology, and the extent to which cells attach to the electrodes. A measurement of the wells with media before the cells are added is considered as the background signal. The background is subtracted from impedance measurements after reaching equilibrium with cells attaching and spreading onto the electrodes. A unitless parameter of the status of the cells on an electrode termed Cell Index (CI) is calculated as follows: CI = (impedance after equilibrium - impedance in the absence of cells) / nominal impedance value6. When migration rates of different cell lines are compared, the Delta CI can be used to compare cell status regardless of the difference in attachment that is represented in the first few measurements.

The newly designed three-chambered array builds on the existing design and uses the top chamber from the dual purpose cell analyzer system that contains the electrodes. The modified middle and bottom chambers are adapted to fit the assembly into the dual purpose cell analyzer for impedance measurement and analysis using the integrated software. The two major advances that the new design provides over the existing dual-chamber CIM-plate (called cell analyzer plate henceforth) are: i) the ability to recover, and then analyze invasive cell subpopulations that are present in heterogeneous cell mixes and ii) the option to assess the impact of secreted factors from co-cultured stromal or immune cells on cell invasion (Figure 1).

This technology can be useful in studying the subpopulations of cells with different invasive capacities. That includes (a) invasive cancer cells that invade surrounding tissues or blood and lymphatic vessels or extravasate at metastatic seeding sites in distant organs, (b) cells from the immune system that invade tissues to tackle pathogens or diseased cells, (c) endothelial cells that invade tissues to form new blood vessels during tissue reorganization or wound healing, as well as (d) stromal cells from the tumor microenvironment that support and invade along with cancer cells. The approach allows the inclusion of stromal cross-talk that can modulate cell motility and invasion. The feasibility studies shown here use this modified array focused on cancer cell invasion and the interaction with the stroma as a model system, including endothelial invasion in response to differential signals from cancer cells. The approach can be extrapolated to isolate cancer cells and other cell types such as subpopulations of immune cells, fibroblasts, or endothelial cells. We tested invasive and non-invasive established breast cancer cell lines as a proof of principle. We also used cells from patient-derived xenograft (PDX) invasion in response to immune cells from human bone marrow to show feasibility for future use also in clinical diagnostic settings. PDX are patient tumor tissues that are implanted in immunocompromised or humanized mice model to allow for studying of growth, progression, and treatment options for the original patient7,8.

Protokół

The study was reviewed and considered as "exempt" by the Institutional Review Board of Georgetown University (IRB # 2002-022). Freshly harvested bone marrow tissues were collected from discarded healthy human bone marrow collection filters that had been de-identified.

1. New chamber design (Figure 2)

  1. Open a new dual-chamber cell analyzer plate. Set aside the top chamber with electrodes.
  2. Using a milling machine, shave off 2 mm of the U-shaped bottom wells of the cell analyzer plate.
  3. Attach a 2 cm x 7 cm polyethersulfone (PES) membrane with 0.2 µm pore size to the bottom of the shaved wells using UV-curated adhesive. Allow 30 min curation time to ensure the glue is completely cured and inert.
  4. Using a milling machine, cut out two longitudinal slits (1.5 mm x 5.6 mm) along the sides to snap into the ridges of the newly fabricated third chamber.
  5. Using a milling machine, create a third polycarbonate chamber that replicates the overall dimensions of the cell analyzer plate; 72 mm x 18 mm (Table of Materials).
  6. Create wells 4.8 mm deep and 4.75 mm in diameter to replicate the 16-well design of the cell analyzer plate. This allows 90 µL of volume per well.
  7. On the sides, create two triangular ridges so that the chamber locks into the original slits created in step 1.4. The horizontal part of the triangle is 1.5 mm, the vertical is 1.4 mm, and the hypotenuse is 2.052 mm.
  8. Create a knob on the short side that is 50.8 mm in diameter and 1.397 mm in height to fit into the original plate's notch (Figure 2, Middle).
  9. Use a 0.9 mm thick rubber washer for each well to provide a sealed fit.

2. Cell culture (MDA-MB-231, DCIS, DCIS-Δ4, J2-fibroblasts)

  1. Wash adherent cell cultures (~70% confluence) with 1x phosphate-buffered saline (PBS).
  2. Add 0.05% trypsin-EDTA solution to lift the cells off.
  3. Neutralize the trypsin solution with cell culture media containing serum and count the cells using an aliquot of the cell suspension.
    ​NOTE: The specific cell culture media can be found in Table 1.

3. Patient-derived xenograft dissociation

  1. Chop a fresh tumor piece (1 cm2) into fine mush using a sterile scalpel.
  2. Place in a 50 mL conical tube with 20 mL of DMEM F12 media supplemented with 3 mg/mL trypsin and 2 mg/mL collagenase.
  3. Incubate in a thermal shaker (150 RPM) at 37 °C for 20 min.
  4. Spin the tube at 500 x g for 5 min; remove the supernatant.
  5. Add 20 μL of DMEM F12 + 2% FBS to wash the cells; spin at 300 x g for 5 min and remove the supernatant. Repeat wash two more times.
  6. Resuspend in 1 mL of PDX media (Table 1) to count the cells.

4. Bone marrow cell extraction

  1. Flush the bone marrow (BM) collection filter with 25 mL of 1x PBS.
    NOTE: In this study, PBS was added to a used BM collection filter from the hospital to collect the remaining BM in the filter.
  2. Add the flushed BM slowly to a 50 mL conical tube with 25 mL of density gradient medium, taking care to keep the layers as separate as possible.
  3. Spin at 800 x g for 20 min at 18 °C
  4. Siphon off the top layers after centrifugation (fat/plasma) and transfer 5 mL of the white layer above the density gradient medium that has the BM cells to a 15 mL conical tube.
    ​NOTE: Alternatively, dip a 5 mL pipette into the top layer until it touches the middle layer (BM) and pipette out the middle layer very slowly without moving the pipette.
  5. Fill the 15 mL conical tube with 1x PBS (~10 mL) and spin at 300 x g for 15 min.
  6. Remove the supernatant; the remaining white pellet is the BM.
  7. If red blood cells are observed in the pellet, add 5 mL of RBC lysis solution (Table of Materials) and let it sit for 5 min at room temperature (RT). Spin at 300 x g for 5 min and remove the supernatant.
  8. Add 10 mL of 1x PBS to wash the cells, spin at 300 x g for 5 min and remove the supernatant. Repeat the RBC lysis (step 4.7) until the pellet is white.

5. Cell seeding and assembly

  1. Place all three sterile chambers in the tissue culture hood.
  2. Locate the knob on the short side of the lower chamber. Orient the lower chamber so that the knob is facing the experimenter.
  3. Add 30,000-50,000 cells in 90 μL of media to each well of the lower chamber. Avoid forming bubbles. These are the stromal cells that will provide secreted factors but will not be detected by the electrodes of the top chamber.
  4. Use 5% fetal bovine serum-supplemented media in two lower chamber wells as a positive control for cell motility. Use 0% serum-supplemented media as a negative control.
  5. Let the lower chamber with the cells sit for 10-15 min in the hood to settle.
    NOTE: This step is recommended if cells are adherent or grow in suspension.
  6. Rotate the lower chamber at 90° and place the middle chamber on top so that the knob on the lower chamber slides into the notch on the middle chamber.
    NOTE: The knob on the lower chamber and the blue dot on the middle chamber are at opposite ends of the assembly.
  7. Push vertically down until a click sound is heard from each of the long sides of the assembly.
  8. Add 160 μL of serum-free media to all the wells of the middle chamber.
  9. Make sure a dome-shaped meniscus is visible after wells are filled; otherwise, adjust the final volume based on the pipette calibration. Avoid forming bubbles.
  10. Place the top chamber with electrodes facing down onto the middle chamber making sure to align the blue dots on the middle and top chambers.
  11. Push vertically down until a click sound is heard from each of the long sides of the assembly.
  12. Add 25-50 μL of serum-free media to the top chamber.
  13. Mount the assembly on the dual purpose cell analyzer in the tissue culture incubator and wait for 30 min before measuring the background.
    NOTE: This time is necessary to equilibrate the array and can be used to prepare the cell lines to be added to the top chamber.
  14. Measure the background (see section 6) and place the assembly back into the tissue culture hood.
  15. Add 30,000-50,000 cells in 100 μL of serum-free media to each well of the top chamber. These are the cells that the electrode will detect once they successfully migrate through the membrane.
    NOTE: To achieve maximum response, it is recommended to grow cells in serum-free or low serum media for 6-18 h before performing the assay.
  16. Let the assembly stand in the hood for 30 min before mounting on the dual purpose cell analyzer for impedance measurement.

6. Background and impedance measurement

  1. Place the array into the cradle in the dual purpose cell analyzer instrument.
  2. Open the cell analyzer software and select the cradle to be used.
  3. Click on the Message tab and make sure it says Connections OK to ensure the array is well placed in the cradle and the electrodes are well aligned with the sensors.
  4. Click on the Experiment Notes tab and fill in as much information about the experiment as possible.
  5. Click on the Layout tab and fill in the description of the array layout.
  6. Click on the Schedule tab and add two steps from the Steps menu; a background step (one sweep) and a test step with 100 sweeps-a sweep every 15 min, totaling 25 h.
  7. After the array has been in the dual purpose cell analyzer incubator for 30 min, click on the Play button to start background measurement. A window asking to choose the folder to save the data will pop up.
  8. After the background measurement is done, remove the array from the cradle and place it back in the cell culture hood.
  9. Add cells to the top chamber as described in step 5.13, and keep the assembly in the tissue culture hood for 30 min for the cells to settle.
  10. Place the array back into the dual purpose cell analyzer and check the Message tab for the Connections OK message.
  11. Click on the Play button to start impedance measurement.
  12. Click on the Plot tab to monitor the progress of the signal.
  13. If the endpoint is reached before 25 h, click on the Abort step from the Execute drop-down menu.
  14. To export data, right-click on the graph, choose Copy in the list format, and then paste the data in a spreadsheet.
    ​NOTE: The data can be exported as cell index or delta cell index. Graph and/or layout information can also be chosen for export.

7. Detachment and cell collection

  1. Monitor the migration rate in real-time on the dual purpose cell analyzer to determine the stopping point of interest (6-18 h).
    NOTE: The stopping point depends on the cell's invasion rate and when a distinct invasion signal from the negative control is achieved.
  2. Once achieved, unmount the assembly from the dual purpose cell analyzer and place it in the tissue culture hood.
  3. Prepare an appropriate number of 1.5 mL microcentrifuge tubes to collect the cells from the wells of interest.
  4. Place the assembly in a 10 cm dish to contain liquids when the chambers detach.
  5. Push the flexible snapping ends on the long side of the middle chamber inward until a click sound is heard.
  6. Dismantle the top chamber and invert it into a new 10 cm dish.
  7. Use a cell lifter with a 13 mm blade to collect the cells from all the wells harboring the same experimental condition (i.e., cell type, drug treatment, etc.).
    NOTE: Design the setup to have at least two wells for each experimental condition to achieve statistically significant change from negative controls.
  8. Rinse or dip the blade in 1x phosphate buffered saline to collect the cells in 1.5 mL microcentrifuge tubes.
  9. Spin down the cells at 500 x g for 5 min.
  10. Propagate the collected cells (see section 8) or perform end point analysis such as single-cell RNA-seq.
    ​NOTE: For bulk RNA-seq, use a low cell number RNA extraction kit.

8. 3D cell propagation and retrieval

NOTE: Due to the small number of cells collected, seed the cells in 3D using an extracellular matrix (ECM) to enhance viability. That said, 2D culture is also an option at this point, especially if the cells used are from established cell lines.

  1. Thaw an aliquot of the basement membrane matrix at 4 °C overnight. Keep the basement membrane matrix on ice until ready to use.
  2. Add 25 μL of cold basement membrane matrix to the pellet of live cells collected and gently pipette up and down to mix. Avoid forming bubbles.
  3. Add the cell-basement membrane matrix mix to the bottom of a small tissue culture well (i.e., in a 96-well plate), forming a dome. Try not to touch the walls of the well. Incubate at 37 °C for 20 min before gently adding 100 μL of media dropwise.
  4. To retrieve cells, aspirate the media and add 100 μL of dispase to each well.
  5. Incubate at RT for 10 min, pipetting up and down occasionally.
  6. Transfer the cells and the dissolved basement membrane matrix into a 1.5 mL microcentrifuge tube. Add 1 mL of 1x PBS, spin at 300 x g for 5 min and remove the supernatant. Repeat the wash once.
  7. Aspirate the supernatant. Split the cells in the pellet or perform endpoint analysis.

Wyniki

Using the newly designed three-chambered array, invasion of the cells was tested in the presence or absence of stromal cells such as fibroblasts. MDA-MB-231 cell invasion was enhanced when irradiated Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts (J2 strain) were seeded in the bottom chamber, allowing for the exchange of factors between the two cell lines. Interestingly, MDA-MB-231 invasion increased when 3T3-J2 cells were doubled in number (Figure 3A). On the other hand, the invasion rate of an invasive clone of MC...

Dyskusje

We have modified the design of a dual-chambered array to include a third chamber for monitoring cell invasion in real-time in the presence of stromal cells. We have observed distinct effects of co-cultured fibroblasts on invasive and non-invasive cancer cells indicating that the array can be used to distinguish between cancer cell subpopulations that respond differently to factors produced by co-cultured stromal cells. The array was also used to monitor endothelial cell invasion into stromal tissues, a critical step duri...

Ujawnienia

Georgetown University filed a patent related to some of the approaches described in this manuscript. G.M.S, A.W, L.D, and M.P are named as inventors on this application and declare that as a potential conflict of interest.

Podziękowania

We would like to thank Dr. Alana Welms, Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah, for providing us with the patient-derived xenografts (HCI-010). This work was supported by NIH grants R01CA205632, R21CA226542, and in part, by a grant from Agilent Technologies.

Materiały

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
0.05% Trypsin-EDTAThermofisher25300-054
AdhesiveNorland Optical AdhesiveNOA63
Bovine serum albumin (BSA)SigmaA9418
Cell lifterSarstedt83.1832
Cholera Toxin from Vibrio choleraeThermofisher12585-014
CIM-plateAgilent5665817001Cell analyzer plate
Collagenase from Clostridium histolyticumSigmaC0130
DispaseStemCell7913
DMEMThermofisher11995-065
DMEM-F12Thermofisher11875-093
Fetal Bovine Serum (FBS), Heat InactivatedOmega ScientificFB-12
HEPESThermofisher15630106
Horse serum (HS)Gibco16050-122
Human EGFPeprotechAF-100-15
Human umbilical Vein endothelail cells (HUVEC)LONZA (RRID:CVCL_2959)C-2517A
HUVEC mediaLONZACC-3162
HydrocortisoneSigmaH4001
Insulin Transferrin Selenium Ethanolamine (ITSX) (100x)Thermofisher51500056
Insulin, Human Recombinant, Zinc SolutionSigmaC8052
J2 FibroblastsStemcell (RRID:CVCL_W667)100-0353
LymphoPrepStemcell7851Density gradient medium for the isolation of mononuclear cells
MatrigelCorning354230Basement membrane matrix
MCFDCIS.com cells ( DCIS)RRID:CVCL_5552
MDA-MB-231 cellsRRID:CVCL_0062
Milling machineBridgeport Series 1 Vertical
Phosphate-buffered saline (1x)Thermofisher10010049
Polyethersulfone (PES) membraneSterlitechPCTF029030
RBC lysis solutionStemcell7800
RNeasy Micro KitQiagen74004
RTCA DP analyzerAgilent3X16Dual purpose cell analyzer
TrypsinSigmaT4799

Odniesienia

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  2. Boyden, S. The chemotactic effect of mixtures of antibody and antigen on polymorphonuclear leucocytes. The Journal of Experimental Medicine. 115 (3), 453-466 (1962).
  3. Xu, Y., et al. A review of impedance measurements of whole cells. Biosensors & Bioelectronics. 77, 824-836 (2016).
  4. Stylianou, D. C., et al. Effect of single-chain antibody targeting of the ligand-binding domain in the anaplastic lymphoma kinase receptor. Oncogene. 28 (37), 3296-3306 (2009).
  5. Abassi, Y. A., Wang, X., Xu, X. Real time electronic cell sensing system and applications for cytotoxcity profiling and compound assays. United States Patent. , 1-88 (2013).
  6. Abassi, Y. A., et al. Label-free, real-time monitoring of IgE-mediated mast cell activation on microelectronic cell sensor arrays. Journal of Immunological Methods. 292 (1-2), 195-205 (2004).
  7. Morton, C. L., Houghton, P. J. Establishment of human tumor xenografts in immunodeficient mice. Nature Protocols. 2 (2), 247-250 (2007).
  8. DeRose, Y. S., et al. Tumor grafts derived from women with breast cancer authentically reflect tumor pathology, growth, metastasis and disease outcomes. Nature Medicine. 17 (11), 1514-1520 (2011).
  9. Sharif, G. M., et al. An AIB1 isoform alters enhancer access and enables progression of early-stage triple-negative breast cancer. Cancer Research. 81 (16), 4230-4241 (2021).
  10. Caileau, R., Olive, M., Cruciger, Q. V. Long-term human breast carcinoma cell lines of metastatic origin: preliminary characterization. In Vitro. 14 (11), 911-915 (1978).
  11. Sharif, G. M., et al. Cell growth density modulates cancer cell vascular invasion via Hippo pathway activity and CXCR2 signaling. Oncogene. 34 (48), 5879-5889 (2015).
  12. Miller, F. R., Santner, S. J., Tait, L., Dawson, P. J. MCF10DCIS.com xenograft model of human comedo ductal carcinoma in situ. Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 92 (14), 1185-1186 (2000).
  13. Winkler, J., Abisoye-Ogunniyan, A., Metcalf, K. J., zenaa, W. Concepts of extracellular matrix remodelling in tumour progression and metastasis. Nature Communications. 11 (1), 1-19 (2020).
  14. Nkosi, D., Sun, L., Duke, L. C., Meckes, D. G. Epstein-Barr virus LMP1 manipulates the content and functions of extracellular vesicles to enhance metastatic potential of recipient cells. PLoS Pathogens. 16 (12), 1009023 (2020).
  15. Eisenberg, M. C., et al. Mechanistic modeling of the effects of myoferlin on tumor cell invasion. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 108 (50), 20078-20083 (2011).

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