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Engineering Breast Cancer Cells and hUMSCs Microenvironment in 2D and 3D Scaffolds: A Mechanical Study Approach of Stem Cells in Anticancer Therapy.

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TLDR
In this article, the effects of cell biomechanics plays a major role as a promising biomarker for early cancer diagnosis and prognosis, and alterations in modulus of elasticity, cell membrane roughness and migratory potential of MCF-7 (ER+) and SKBR-3 (HER2+) cancer cells were elucidated prior to and post treatment with conditioned medium from human umbilical mesenchymal stem cells (hUMSCs-CM) during static and dynamic cell culture.
Abstract
Cell biomechanics plays a major role as a promising biomarker for early cancer diagnosis and prognosis. In the present study, alterations in modulus of elasticity, cell membrane roughness, and migratory potential of MCF-7 (ER+) and SKBR-3 (HER2+) cancer cells were elucidated prior to and post treatment with conditioned medium from human umbilical mesenchymal stem cells (hUMSCs-CM) during static and dynamic cell culture. Moreover, the therapeutic potency of hUMSCs-CM on cancer cell’s viability, migratory potential, and F-actin quantified intensity was addressed in 2D surfaces and 3D scaffolds. Interestingly, alterations in ER+ cancer cells showed a positive effect of treatment upon limiting cell viability, motility, and potential for migration. Moreover, increased post treatment cell stiffness indicated rigid cancer cells with confined cell movement and cytoskeletal alterations with restricted lamellipodia formation, which enhanced these results. On the contrary, the cell viability and the migratory potential were not confined post treatment with hUMSCs-CM on HER2+ cells, possibly due to their intrinsic aggressiveness. The increased post treatment cell viability and the decreased cell stiffness indicated an increased potency for cell movement. Hence, the therapy had no efficacy on HER2+ cells.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Adhesion strength and anti-tumor agents regulate vinculin of breast cancer cells

TL;DR: The results showed that the post-treatment spreading rate was significantly decreased in both types of breast cancer, suggesting a lower metastatic potential and the probability of cell motility, migration, and metastasis was confined.
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Biomechanics Assist Measurement, Modeling, Engineering Applications, and Clinical Decision Making in Medicine

Qing-xia Chi, +1 more
- 22 Dec 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors performed a biomechanical study of surgery and medical devices using human or animal models. But they did not use animal models to perform the experiments, instead, they used human models.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Choosing the right cell line for breast cancer research

TL;DR: The issues surrounding the use of breast cancer cell lines as experimental models are discussed, in light of these revised clinical classifications, and suggestions for improving their use in translational breast cancer research are put forward.
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Mechanism of shape determination in motile cells

TL;DR: The natural phenotypic variability in a large population of motile epithelial keratocytes from fish to reveal mechanisms of shape determination is harnessed and it is found that the cells inhabit a low-dimensional, highly correlated spectrum of possible functional states.
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Breast Cancer Cell Line Classification and Its Relevance with Breast Tumor Subtyping.

TL;DR: Breast tumor cell lines are feasible but crude models for tumors of the same subtype, and new cell lines with enriched interferon regulated genes need to be established to enlarge the coverage of cell lines on tumor heterogeneity.
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Mechanical Properties of Collagen Fibrils

TL;DR: The hypothesis that collagen anisotropy is due to the subfibrils being aligned along the fibril axis is supported by nonuniform surface imprints performed by high load nanoindentation.
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Advances in 3D cell culture technologies enabling tissue-like structures to be created in vitro.

TL;DR: The limitations of culturing mammalian cells by conventional methods on two‐dimensional substrates are identified and the popular approaches currently available that enable the development of three‐dimensional (3D) tissue models in vitro are reviewed.