2008 APS March Meeting
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session X15: Emerging Nano-based Diagnostics and Therapeutics: Approaches to Cancer Treatment
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Friday, March 14, 2008
Morial Convention Center
Room: 207
Sponsoring
Units:
DBP FIAP
Chair: Larry Nagahara, National Cancer Institute
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.X15.1
Abstract: X15.00001 : Intracellular Mechanics-Based Drug Screening for Cancer Metastasis
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Yilder Tseng
(University of Florida)
In 2007 alone, close to 1.5 million new cancer cases and over
half of a million deaths from cancer are projected to occur in
US. In general, cancer is much easier to be successfully treated
before metastasis; the five-year survival rates for most of the
cancers in the metastatic stage are lower than 10\%. The origin
of cancer is due to genomic instability; however, the genomics or
proteomics studies focus on this phenomenon cannot thoroughly
elucidate how cancer metastasis proceeds. During this process,
cancer cells protrude and conquer their physical barriers, resist
shear stress, establish anchorages and finally settle in a new
environment. Each development in this process involves mechanical
forces. Thus, whether force generation and cancer cells'
mechanical properties can be integrated into the current
mainstream of cancer research and offer new insight is worthy of
being investigated.
To measure the change of cell mechanics, specifically
intracellular mechanics, a tool that least disrupts the probed
cell's behavior and, simultaneously, can obtain real time
quantitative measurement is necessary. To satisfy these criteria,
we have developed a technique, ballistic intracellular
nanorheology (BIN), in which we trace and analyze the
trajectories of nanospheres that have been ballistically
bombarded into the cytoplasm of individual cells. This technique
allows us to probe the effects of chemical or mechanical stimuli
on intracellular mechanics in various types of cells, on culture
dishes or in a three-dimensional matrix. BIN is, currently, the
first and only method available that can be applied to perform
such tasks. Using this technique, we have gained detailed
information about how the cytoskeletal remodeling pathways
control the intracellular mechanics. We have also obtained
information on the tempo-correlation between agonists and
intracellular mechanics and how cells utilize their intracellular
mechanics to react extracellular shear stress. These studies have
set the framework for us to understand the mechanical mechanism
of cancer cell metastasis on a molecular level.
In this talk, I will describe the working principal using this
technique to screen cancer drugs that prevent cancer metastasis.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.X15.1