How Tumor Cells Can Make Use of Interstitial Fluid Flow in a Strategy for Metastasis

被引:19
|
作者
Evje, Steinar [1 ]
Waldeland, Jahn Otto [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Stavanger, Dept Energy & Petr, N-4068 Stavanger, Norway
关键词
Cell-migration; Multiphase flow; Interstitial fluid; Interstitial fluid pressure; Lymphatic flow; Vascular flow; Autologous chemotaxis; Chemokine; Receptor; TO-MESENCHYMAL TRANSITION; COLLECTIVE INVASION; MULTIPHASE MODEL; MIGRATION; MECHANISMS; MICROENVIRONMENT; HALLMARKS; PRESSURE;
D O I
10.1007/s12195-019-00569-0
中图分类号
Q813 [细胞工程];
学科分类号
摘要
IntroductionThe phenomenon of lymph node metastasis has been known for a long time. However, the underlying mechanism by which malignant tumor cells are able to break loose from the primary tumor site remains unclear. In particular, two competing fluid sensitive migration mechanisms have been reported in the experimental literature: (i) autologous chemotaxis (Shields et al. in Cancer Cell 11:526-538, 2007) which gives rise to downstream migration; (ii) an integrin-mediated and strain-induced upstream mechanism (Polacheck et al. in PNAS 108:11115-11120, 2011). How can these two competing mechanisms be used as a means for metastatic behavior in a realistic tumor setting? Excessive fluid flow is typically produced from leaky intratumoral blood vessels and collected by lymphatics in the peritumoral region giving rise to a heterogeneous fluid velocity field and a corresponding heterogeneous cell migration behavior, quite different from the experimental setup.MethodIn order to shed light on this issue there is a need for tools which allow one to extrapolate the observed single cell behavior in a homogeneous microfluidic environment to a more realistic, higher-dimensional tumor setting. Here we explore this issue by using a computational multiphase model. The model has been trained with data from the experimental results mentioned above which essentially reflect one-dimensional behavior. We extend the model to an envisioned idealized two-dimensional tumor setting.ResultA main observation from the simulation is that the autologous chemotaxis migration mechanism, which triggers tumor cells to go with the flow in the direction of lymphatics, becomes much more aggressive and effective as a means for metastasis in the presence of realistic IF flow. This is because the outwardly directed IF flow generates upstream cell migration that possibly empowers small clusters of tumor cells to break loose from the primary tumor periphery. Without this upstream stress-mediated migration, autologous chemotaxis is inclined to move cells at the rim of the tumor in a homogeneous and collective, but space-demanding style. In contrast, inclusion of realistic IF flow generates upstream migration that allows two different aspects to be synthesized: maintain the coherency and solidity of the the primary tumor and at the same time cleave the outgoing waves of tumor cells into small clusters at the front that can move collectively in a more specific direction.
引用
收藏
页码:227 / 254
页数:28
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] How Tumor Cells Can Make Use of Interstitial Fluid Flow in a Strategy for Metastasis
    Steinar Evje
    Jahn Otto Waldeland
    Cellular and Molecular Bioengineering, 2019, 12 : 227 - 254
  • [2] How tumor cells make use of CD44
    Herrlich, P
    Sleeman, J
    Wainwright, D
    König, H
    Sharman, L
    Hilberg, F
    Ponta, H
    CELL ADHESION AND COMMUNICATION, 1998, 6 (2-3) : 141 - 147
  • [3] Regulation of tumor invasion by interstitial fluid flow
    Shieh, Adrian C.
    Swartz, Melody A.
    PHYSICAL BIOLOGY, 2011, 8 (01)
  • [4] Interstitial fluid pressure (IFP) and metastasis in a panel of tumor models
    Lunt, Sarah J.
    Kalliomaki, Tuula Mk
    Milosevic, Mike
    Hill, Richard P.
    CANCER RESEARCH, 2006, 66 (08)
  • [5] EFFECT OF TUMOR HETEROGENEITY ON INTERSTITIAL PRESSURE AND FLUID FLOW
    Pyrz, Matthew
    Baish, James
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASME SUMMER BIOENGINEERING CONFERENCE - 2013, PT A, 2014,
  • [6] HOW STRATEGY-MAKING PROCESSES CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE
    HART, S
    BANBURY, C
    STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 1994, 15 (04) : 251 - 269
  • [7] How you can use everything you make
    Immel, B
    BIOPHARM-THE TECHNOLOGY & BUSINESS OF BIOPHARMACEUTICALS, 1996, 9 (05): : 78 - 80
  • [8] How Prostate Cancer Cells Use Strategy Instead of Brute Force to Achieve Metastasis
    Tharp, Darron
    Nandana, Srinivas
    CANCERS, 2019, 11 (12)
  • [9] A mathematical model for tumor cords incorporating the flow of interstitial fluid
    Bertuzzi, A
    Fasano, A
    Gandolfi, A
    MATHEMATICAL MODELS & METHODS IN APPLIED SCIENCES, 2005, 15 (11): : 1735 - 1777
  • [10] NUMBERS - WHAT THEY ARE AND HOW WE CAN MAKE USE OF THEM
    FROOM, R
    TELECOMMUNICATION JOURNAL, 1972, 39 (09): : 554 - &