Dissecting the individuality of cancer cells: the morphological and molecular dynamics of single human glioma cells.

K A Giuliano
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

A glioma produces some of the most heterogeneously growing, angiogenic, and invasive primary brain tumor cells known. To dissect cellular individuality, and therefore tumor heterogeneity, multiple morphological and molecular processes in single living human glioma cells were measured using multimode light microscopy. Feature extraction of time-lapse image series of spreading, locomoting, and interacting cells either in the presence or absence of physiological modulators was performed by defining five parameters that described cell shape, movement, and cell-cell contacts. Concurrent visualization of all five parameters with a scatterplot matrix revealed temporal as well as time-independent relationships between the parameters that were sufficient to define the individuality of normal and transformed glial cells. Because the actin-cytoskeleton plays a role in regulating the cellular processes described above, the dynamics of a fluorescent analog of non-muscle actin within motile glioma cells were measured in addition to the morphological parameters. The actin-cytoskeleton within the thin sweeping lamellipodia of a glioma exhibited a paucity of large stress fibers, a rich collection of microvillar structures containing actin, and dynamics that were distinct from those of normal motile cells. This approach can therefore potentially be used to dissect the molecular origins of transformation using a small number of representative tumor cells.

解剖癌细胞的个性:单个人类胶质瘤细胞的形态学和分子动力学。
胶质瘤产生一些生长最不均匀、血管生成和侵袭性的原发性脑肿瘤细胞。为了解剖细胞的个性和肿瘤的异质性,使用多模光学显微镜测量了单个活的人类胶质瘤细胞的多种形态和分子过程。通过定义描述细胞形状、运动和细胞-细胞接触的五个参数,在存在或不存在生理调节剂的情况下,对扩散、运动和相互作用细胞的延时图像系列进行特征提取。用散点图矩阵同时可视化所有五个参数,揭示了参数之间的时间和时间无关关系,这些关系足以定义正常和转化胶质细胞的个性。由于肌动蛋白-细胞骨架在调节上述细胞过程中起作用,除了形态学参数外,还测量了运动胶质瘤细胞中非肌肉肌动蛋白的荧光模拟物的动力学。神经胶质瘤薄片状足内的肌动蛋白细胞骨架显示出大应力纤维的缺乏,含有肌动蛋白的微绒毛结构的丰富集合,以及与正常运动细胞不同的动力学。因此,这种方法可以潜在地用于使用少量具有代表性的肿瘤细胞来解剖转化的分子起源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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