Issue 20, 2011

Cell receptor and surface ligand density effects on dynamic states of adhering circulating tumor cells

Abstract

Dynamic states of cancer cells moving under shear flow in an antibody-functionalized microchannel are investigated experimentally and theoretically. The cell motion is analyzed with the aid of a simplified physical model featuring a receptor-coated rigid sphere moving above a solid surface with immobilized ligands. The motion of the sphere is described by the Langevin equation accounting for the hydrodynamic loadings, gravitational force, receptor-ligand bindings, and thermal fluctuations; the receptor-ligand bonds are modeled as linear springs. Depending on the applied shear flow rate, three dynamic states of cell motion have been identified: (i) free motion, (ii) rolling adhesion, and (iii) firm adhesion. Of particular interest is the fraction of captured circulating tumor cells, defined as the capture ratio, via specific receptor-ligand bonds. The cell capture ratio decreases with increasing shear flow rate with a characteristic rate. Based on both experimental and theoretical results, the characteristic flow rate increases monotonically with increasing either cell-receptor or surface-ligand density within certain ranges. Utilizing it as a scaling parameter, flow-rate dependent capture ratios for various cell-surface combinations collapse onto a single curve described by an exponential formula.

Graphical abstract: Cell receptor and surface ligand density effects on dynamic states of adhering circulating tumor cells

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 May 2011
Accepted
27 Jul 2011
First published
19 Aug 2011

Lab Chip, 2011,11, 3431-3439

Cell receptor and surface ligand density effects on dynamic states of adhering circulating tumor cells

X. Zheng, L. S. Cheung, J. A. Schroeder, L. Jiang and Y. Zohar, Lab Chip, 2011, 11, 3431 DOI: 10.1039/C1LC20455F

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