Quantifying Microtentacle Dynamics for Non-adherent Tumor Cells

POSTER

Abstract

In current cancer medicine, metastasis is still responsible for 90% of fatalities of cancer patients. Disseminated tumor cells reattaching to the blood vessel walls remains a critical and incompletely understood step in metastasis. One of the possible mechanisms for reattachment involves tubulin-based protrusions called microtentacles. It has been hypothesized that microtentacles form due to an imbalance between microtubules and actin cortex mechanical interactions. Using image analysis techniques on non-adherent breast tumor cells tethered to a surface under drug perturbations targeting microtubule stability, we are able to examine into microtentacle dynamics. We show that stabilizing tubulin leads to a greater number and length of microtentacles.

Authors

  • Eleanor Ory

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Desu Chen

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Kristi Chakrabarti

    University of Maryland School of Medicine

  • Stuart Martin

    University of Maryland School of Medicine

  • Wolfgang Losert

    Chemical Physics Graduate Program, University of Maryland, University of Maryland, College Park, Department of Physics, University of Maryland, College Park, Univ of Maryland-College Park, University of Maryland