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Microfluidic isolation of platelet-covered circulating tumor cells.

Authors :
Jiang X
Wong KHK
Khankhel AH
Zeinali M
Reategui E
Phillips MJ
Luo X
Aceto N
Fachin F
Hoang AN
Kim W
Jensen AE
Sequist LV
Maheswaran S
Haber DA
Stott SL
Toner M
Source :
Lab on a chip [Lab Chip] 2017 Oct 11; Vol. 17 (20), pp. 3498-3503.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The interplay between platelets and tumor cells is known to play important roles in metastasis by enhancing tumor cell survival, tumor-vascular interactions, and escape from immune surveillance. However, platelet-covered circulating tumor cells (CTC) are extremely difficult to isolate due to masking or downregulation of surface epitopes. Here we describe a microfluidic platform that takes advantage of the satellite platelets on the surface of these "stealth" CTCs as a ubiquitous surface marker for isolation. Compared to conventional CTC enrichment techniques which rely on known surface markers expressed by tumor cells, platelet-targeted isolation is generally applicable to CTCs of both epithelial and mesenchymal phenotypes. Our approach first depletes unbound, free platelets by means of hydrodynamic size-based sorting, followed by immunoaffinity-based capture of platelet-covered CTCs using a herringbone micromixing device. This method enabled the reliable isolation of CTCs from 66% of lung and 60% of breast cancer (both epithelial) patient samples, as well as in 83% of melanoma (mesenchymal) samples. Interestingly, we observed special populations of CTCs that were extensively covered by platelets, as well as CTC-leukocyte clusters. Because these cloaked CTCs often escape conventional positive and negative isolation mechanisms, further characterization of these cells may uncover important yet overlooked biological information in blood-borne metastasis and cancer immunology.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1473-0189
Volume :
17
Issue :
20
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Lab on a chip
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28932842
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c7lc00654c