Washington [US]: Researchers examine the local communication between endothelial cells and tumors cells and its effects on endothelial cell orientation. The approach uses co-cultured human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells and breast epithelial tumor cell lines to simulate the tumor-endothelial interaction. The group found the clockwise chirality of the hUVECs was less affected by local hormone signaling and more so by direct physical contact with tumor cells. Specific proteins on the tumor cell binding to others on endothelial cells appeared to play a role in changing the clockwise chirality of hUVECs.
In APL Bioengineering, by AIP Publishing, researchers from the University of Michigan-Dearborn, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and the University at Albany - SUNY developed a model that examines the local communication between endothelial cells and tumors cells and its effects on endothelial cell orientation. The approach involves the use of co-cultured human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (hUVECs) and breast epithelial tumor cell lines to simulate the tumor-endothelial interaction.
"The blood vessels in tumor tissues are much leakier than those in normal tissues," said author Jie Fan. "We are curious whether the tumor cells can induce the weakening in the clockwise orientation of endothelial cells and cause them to disorganize in the vessel." The work expands on recent findings that showed that endothelial cells have chirality, a type of mirrored-image orientation similar to right and left hands, and they tend to skew in a clockwise direction.
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