TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessing tumor microenvironment of metastasis doorway-mediated vascular permeability associated with cancer cell dissemination using intravital imaging and fixed tissue analysis
AU - Karagiannis, George S.
AU - Pastoriza, Jessica M.
AU - Borriello, Lucia
AU - Jafari, Rojin
AU - Coste, Anouchka
AU - Condeelis, John S.
AU - Oktay, Maja H.
AU - Entenberg, David
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank the Analytical Imaging Facility (AIF) in the Albert Einstein College of Medicine for imaging support. This work was supported by grants from the NCI (P30CA013330, CA150344, CA 100324 and CA216248), the SIG 1S10OD019961-01, the Gruss-Lipper Biophotonics Center and its Integrated Imaging Program, and Montefiore’s Ruth L. Kirschstein T32 Training Grant of Surgeons for the Study of the Tumor Microenvironment (CA200561).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Journal of Visualized Experiments.
PY - 2019/6
Y1 - 2019/6
N2 - The most common cause of cancer related mortality is metastasis, a process that requires dissemination of cancer cells from the primary tumor to secondary sites. Recently, we established that cancer cell dissemination in primary breast cancer and at metastatic sites in the lung occurs only at doorways called Tumor MicroEnvironment of Metastasis (TMEM). TMEM doorway number is prognostic for distant recurrence of metastatic disease in breast cancer patients. TMEM doorways are composed of a cancer cell which over-expresses the actin regulatory protein Mena in direct contact with a perivascular, proangiogenic macrophage which expresses high levels of TIE2 and VEGF, where both of these cells are tightly bound to a blood vessel endothelial cell. Cancer cells can intravasate through TMEM doorways due to transient vascular permeability orchestrated by the joint activity of the TMEM-associated macrophage and the TMEM-associated Mena-expressing cancer cell. In this manuscript, we describe two methods for assessment of TMEM-mediated transient vascular permeability: intravital imaging and fixed tissue immunofluorescence. Although both methods have their advantages and disadvantages, combining the two may provide the most complete analyses of TMEM-mediated vascular permeability as well as microenvironmental prerequisites for TMEM function. Since the metastatic process in breast cancer, and possibly other types of cancer, involves cancer cell dissemination via TMEM doorways, it is essential to employ well established methods for the analysis of the TMEM doorway activity. The two methods described here provide a comprehensive approach to the analysis of TMEM doorway activity, either in naïve or pharmacologically treated animals, which is of paramount importance for pre-clinical trials of agents that prevent cancer cell dissemination via TMEM.
AB - The most common cause of cancer related mortality is metastasis, a process that requires dissemination of cancer cells from the primary tumor to secondary sites. Recently, we established that cancer cell dissemination in primary breast cancer and at metastatic sites in the lung occurs only at doorways called Tumor MicroEnvironment of Metastasis (TMEM). TMEM doorway number is prognostic for distant recurrence of metastatic disease in breast cancer patients. TMEM doorways are composed of a cancer cell which over-expresses the actin regulatory protein Mena in direct contact with a perivascular, proangiogenic macrophage which expresses high levels of TIE2 and VEGF, where both of these cells are tightly bound to a blood vessel endothelial cell. Cancer cells can intravasate through TMEM doorways due to transient vascular permeability orchestrated by the joint activity of the TMEM-associated macrophage and the TMEM-associated Mena-expressing cancer cell. In this manuscript, we describe two methods for assessment of TMEM-mediated transient vascular permeability: intravital imaging and fixed tissue immunofluorescence. Although both methods have their advantages and disadvantages, combining the two may provide the most complete analyses of TMEM-mediated vascular permeability as well as microenvironmental prerequisites for TMEM function. Since the metastatic process in breast cancer, and possibly other types of cancer, involves cancer cell dissemination via TMEM doorways, it is essential to employ well established methods for the analysis of the TMEM doorway activity. The two methods described here provide a comprehensive approach to the analysis of TMEM doorway activity, either in naïve or pharmacologically treated animals, which is of paramount importance for pre-clinical trials of agents that prevent cancer cell dissemination via TMEM.
KW - Blood vessel permeability
KW - Cancer Research
KW - High molecular weight dextran
KW - Immunofluorescence
KW - Immunofluorescence
KW - Intravital imaging
KW - Issue 148
KW - Metastasis
KW - Tumor microenvironment of metastasis (TMEM)
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UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85069826194&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3791/59633
DO - 10.3791/59633
M3 - Article
C2 - 31305525
AN - SCOPUS:85069826194
SN - 1940-087X
VL - 2019
JO - Journal of Visualized Experiments
JF - Journal of Visualized Experiments
IS - 148
M1 - e59633
ER -