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A new way
to study how Breast Cancer spreads
Newswise — In a breakthrough study appearing
in advance online publication of Nature
Methods, researchers at Albert Einstein
College of Medicine of Yeshiva University
describe for the first time a method of
viewing individual breast cancer cells for
several days at a time.
The study, by scientists in Einstein’s Gruss
Lipper Biophotonics Center, provides detail
on how cancer cells invade surrounding
tissue and reach blood vessels.
These movements are the first steps of the
potentially deadly stage of cancer known as
metastasis.
The new method of viewing cancer cells over
several days in their natural environment is
considered significant because prior methods
of study only allowed cells to be viewed
clearly for several hours at one time.
Having a longer and clearer window into how
cancer cells move during the early stages of
metastasis may help scientists develop more
effective cancer therapies.
For 2007, the American Cancer Society
reported that a woman with metastatic breast
cancer had an average survival rate of two
years.
Using intravital imaging, the researchers
developed a “photoswitch” to mark cancer
cells of their choosing within a tumor and
observe how these tumor cells in mice move
in their surrounding tissue.
The technique allowed researchers to see
individually labeled tumor cells move in
real time and in living mice.
“One focus of our laboratories has been
developing methods to see what cancer cells
are doing when followed over time in the
most realistic setting,” explained Jeffrey
Segall, Ph.D., professor of anatomy and
structural biology.
“Mapping the fate of tumor cells in
different regions of a tumor was not
possible before the development of the
photoswitching technology,” explained John
Condeelis, Ph.D., co-chair and professor of
anatomy and structural biology and
co-director of the Gruss Lipper Biophotonics
Center.
The new method involves the placement of a
frame containing a small glass window onto
the breast tumor of a mouse formed from
cancerous cells that have a specific tag.
Through
the glass, individual breast tumor cells are
targeted with a laser that ‘marks’ the
cancer cells red.
By viewing the cells through the window
using a microscope, researchers can follow
the cells as they spread.
The mouse can move around and live normally
with the glass plate and then be
anesthetized briefly for observance under
the microscope. The marked cancer cells are
followed over a period of days until they
lose their brightness.
Using this technique, investigators found
that breast cancer cells closer to blood
vessels were more aggressive and directed in
their invasiveness than cancer cells farther
from blood vessels.
The cancer cells near blood vessels also
appeared in the lung indicating that they
are disseminated throughout the body.
As co-lead author, Bojana Gligorijevic
Ph.D., explained, “Our work showed how
important the microenvironment of a tumor is
to the behavior of a cancer cell and the
metastatic outcome of the tumor itself.
"We
can now look at the early steps of
metastasis in high resolution and specific
regions of the tumor.”
This finding marks the first time a direct
link was shown between the presence of blood
vessels and the invasive ability of a cancer
cell, which strengthens the growing theory
that blood supply is crucial to effective
metastasis.
It
also suggests that many cancer therapies
currently in development, which are directed
at cutting off blood supply to tumors, may
be on the right track.
The research was conducted by Dmitriy Kedrin,
Bojana Gligorijevic, Ph.D. and team leader
Jacco van Rheenen, Ph.D. under the direction
of Drs. Segall and Condeelis. Vladislav
Verkhusha, Ph.D., associate professor of
anatomy and structural biology, and Jeffrey
Wyckoff, M.F.A., B.S., senior associate of
anatomy and structural biology, both members
of the Biophotonics Center, contributed
novel photo-switching protein, and expertise
in intravital imaging, respectively.
This study required this broad
multidisciplinary team and the resources of
the Center to make the technical leap needed
to achieve this new result. The Center has
been supported by the generous contributions
of Evelyn Lipper.
Each year, cancer kills 553,000 people in
the U.S.
Most cancer deaths are caused by
complications from metastasis, the spread of
cancer cells to distant tissues and organs
through the blood, rather than from the
primary tumor itself.
This research provides a powerful tool for
studying cancer metastasis and is part of a
growing body of Einstein cancer research
that sheds light on how cancer spreads.
The study has been chosen for highlight at
the 48th Annual Meeting of The American
Society of Cell Biology in San Francisco on
December 15, 2008 to be presented by Dr.
Gligorijevic.
Albert Einstein College of Medicine of
Yeshiva University is one of the nation’s
premier centers for research, medical
education and clinical investigation.
It is the home to some 2,000 faculty
members, 750 M.D. students, 350 Ph.D.
students (including 125 in combined
M.D./Ph.D. programs) and 380 postdoctoral
investigators.
Today, Einstein receives more than $150
million annually in support from the NIH.
This includes the funding of major research
centers at Einstein in diabetes, cancer,
liver disease, and AIDS.
Other areas where the College of Medicine is
concentrating its efforts include
developmental brain research, neuroscience,
cardiac disease, and initiatives to reduce
and eliminate ethnic and racial health
disparities.
Through its extensive affiliation network
involving five hospital centers in the
Bronx, Manhattan and Long Island – which
includes Montefiore Medical Center,
Einstein’s officially designated University
Hospital – the College runs one of the
largest post-graduate medical training
program in the United States, offering
approximately 150 residency programs to more
than 2,500 physicians in training. For more
information, please visit
www.aecom.yu.edu.
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