Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Device promising for detecting Metastatic
Breast Cancer Cells
Newswise, January 12, 2011 — Research by
engineers and cancer biologists at Virginia
Tech indicate that using specific silicon
microdevices might provide a new way to
screen breast cancer cells’ ability to
metastasize.
An image of their work provided to Biomaterials was
selected as one of the 12 best
biomaterials-related images published in the
journal’s 2010 catalogue.http://www.elsevierscitech.com/pdfs/Biomaterials_2010.pdf
The Virginia Tech researchers are: Masoud
Agah, director of Virginia Tech’s Microelectromechanical
Systems Laboratory (MEMS) Laboratory in
the Bradley Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering; Jeannine Strobl, a
research professor in the Bradley
Department of Electrical and Computer
Engineering; Mehdi Nikkhah of
mechanical engineering; and Raffaella
DeVita of
engineering science and mechanics and the
director of the soft biological systems
laboratory. Nikkhah was Virginia Tech’s
Outstanding Doctoral Student in the College
of Engineering for 2009.
Their work appeared in two journal articles
they authored in 2010 issues of Biomaterials,
titled “Actions of the anti-cancer drug
suberoylanilide hydroaxamic acid (SAHA) on
human breast cancer cytoarchitecture in
silicon microstructures,” and “The
cytoskeletal organization of breast
carcinoma and fibroblast cells inside three
dimensional isotropic microstructures.”
Cell cytoskeleton refers to the cell’s shape
and its mechanical properties, Agah
explained. “Any change in the cytoskeletal
structure can affect the interaction of
cells with their surrounding
microenvironments.
Biological events in normal cells such as
embryonic development, tissue growth and
repair, and immune responses, as well as
cancer cell motility and invasiveness are
dependent upon cytoskeletal reorganization,”
the electrical engineer added.
Understanding how the cell interacts with
the contents of its surrounding environment
inside the human body, including the
introduction of a drug, is a fundamental
biological question. The answers have
implications in cancer diagnosis and
therapy, as well as tissue engineering, Agah
said.
In previous experimentation by others in the
field, researchers have exposed cells to
mechanical, chemical and three-dimensional
topographical stimuli. They recorded the
cells’ various responses in terms of
migration, growth, and ability to adhere.
Also, in the past, researchers have created
substrates of precise micro- and nano-topographical
and chemical patterns to mimic in vivo
microenvironments for biological and medical
applications.
What distinguishes the work of Agah, a
National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER
Award recipient, and his colleagues, is they
developed a specific three-dimensional
silicon microstructure for their work.
Due to its curved isotropic surfaces, they
were able to characterize and compare the
growth and adhesion behavior of normal
fibroblast and metastatic human breast
cancer cells, they reported in Biomaterials.
“In invasive breast carcinoma, tumor cells
will fill a milk duct, and the basement
membrane,” they wrote.
"This
action allows the carcinoma cells and the
fibroblast cells of the breast tissue to be
in close proximity, constituting “a critical pathobiological transition that
leads to the progression of the disease,”
Strobl said.
Using their uniquely designed
three-dimensional silicon microstructure,
they were able to incorporate three key
cellular components found in any breast
tumor microenvironment.
Additionally, they were able to determine
the detailed interaction of the cells within
this environment, including the normal
breast cells, the metastatic breast cancer
cells, and the fibroblast cells.
Their understanding of the behavior of the
cells within the microstructures is what
leads them to believe their research could
“provide important diagnostic and prognostic
markers unique to the tumor, which could
ultimately be used to develop new tools for
the detection and treatment of cancer.”
Following their initial findings, Strobl,
Nikkhah and Agah identified a unique
application of the experimental anti-cancer
drug SAHA in their studies with the silicon
microstructure. SAHA, also known as
Vorinostat, is the first drug of its type to
receive Food and Drug Administration
approval for clinical use in cancer
treatment.
Unlike many of the conventional cytotoxic
chemotherapy agents that target DNA to kill
cancer cells, SAHA’s unique properties
include its ability to inhibit a family of
enzymes referred to medically as “histone
deacetylases.” These enzymes are known to
“increase levels of acetylation of many
proteins, including beta-actin, alpha-, and
beta-tubulin, and additional actin binding
proteins comprising the cytoskeleton.
“The role of drugs such as SAHA in the
control of cancer cell metastasis is only
beginning to be understood,” explained
Strobl, “however our work shows that SAHA
elicits a very characteristic cytoskeletal
alteration specifically in metastatic breast
cells that provides a handle for predicting
which breast cells in a cell mixture might
have the ability to metastasize.”
Cell motility is “one hallmark of metastatic
cancer cells involving the coordinated
actions of actin and other cytoskeleton
proteins,” Agah explained. When metastatic
disease develops, it is usually fatal.
They found SAHA caused cancer cells to
stretch and attach to the microstructures
through actin-rich cell extensions. By
contrast, control cells conformed to the
microstructures. This result allowed them to
“conclude that isotropically etched silicon
microstructures comprise microenvironments
that discriminate metastatic mammary cancer
cells in which cytoskeletal elements
reorganized in response to the anti-cancer
agent SAHA.”
The Virginia Tech work in this area “is the
first to address the use of microdevices to
study this emerging class of anti-cancer
agents,” Agah said.