Conventional
biology expects the process of mammalian cell division, mitosis, to occur by
the equal partition of a mother cell into two daughter cells. Bioengineers at
UCLA Engineering have developed a platform that mechanically confines cells,
simulating the in vivo three-dimensional environments in which they divide.
Upon confinement they have discovered that cancer cells can divide a large
percentage of the time into three or more daughter cells instead.
It's well known in conventional biology that during the
process of mammalian cell division,
or mitosis, a mother cell divides
equally into two daughter
cells. But when it comes to cancer, say UCLA researchers, mother cells may
be far more prolific.
Bioengineers at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of
Engineering and Applied
Science developed a platform to mechanically confine cells, simulating
the in vivo three-dimensional environments in which they divide, and found
that, upon confinement, cancer
cells often split into three or more daughter cells.
"We hope that this platform will allow us to better
understand how the 3-D mechanical environment may play a role in the
progression of a benign tumorinto
a malignant tumor that
kills," said Dino Di Carlo, an associate professor of bioengineering at
UCLA and principal investigator on the research.
The biological process of
mitosis is tightly regulated by specific biochemical checkpoints to ensure that
each daughter cell receives an equal set of sub-cellular materials, such as
chromosomes or organelles,
to create new cells properly.
However, when these checkpoints are miscued, the mistakes
can have detrimental consequences. One key component is chromosomal count: When
a new cell acquires extra chromosomes or loses chromosomes — known as
aneuploidy — the regulation of important biological processes can be disrupted,
a key characteristic of many invasive cancers. A cell that divides into more
than two daughter cells undergoes a complex choreography of chromosomal motion
that can result in aneuploidy.
By investigating the contributing factors that lead to
mismanagement during the process of chromosome segregation, scientists may
better understand the progression of cancer, said the researchers, whose
findings were recently published online in the peer-reviewed journal PLoS
ONE.
For the study, the UCLA team created a microfluidic
platform to mechanically confine cancer cells to study the effects of 3-D
microenvironments on mitosis events. The platform allowed for high-resolution,
single-cell microscopic observations as the cells grew and divided. This
platform, the researchers said, enabled them to better mimic the in vivo
conditions of a tumor's space-constrained growth in 3-D environments — in
contrast to traditionally used culture flasks.
Surprisingly, the team observed that such confinement
resulted in the abnormal division of a single cancer cell into three or four
daughter cells at a much higher rate than typical. And a few times, they
observed a single cell splitting into five daughter cells during a single
division event, likely leading to aneuploid daughter cells.
"Even though cancer can arise from a set of precise
mutations, the majority of malignant tumors possess aneuploid cells, and the
reason for this is still an open question," said Di Carlo, who is also a
member of the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA. "Our new
microfluidic platform offers a more reliable way for researchers to study how
the unique tumor environment may contribute to aneuploidy."
Provided by University
of California, Los Angeles
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