Abstract
File main pdf file (CRRC of dispersed-settled spheroidal cells.pdf) describes experimental results and their interpretation for a study of tissue relevance of analyses of dispersed-settled tissues cells by Cytometry of Reaction Rate Constant (CRRC). CRRC uses time-lapse fluorescence microscopy to
measure a rate constant of a catalytic reaction in individual cells and, thus,
facilitate accurate size determination for cell subpopulations
with distinct efficiencies of this reaction. Practical CRRC requires that
a tissue sample be disintegrated into a suspension of dispersed cells and these
cells settle on the support surface before being analyzed by CRRC. We call such cells “dispersed-settled”
to distinguish them from cells cultured as a monolayer. Studies of the
dispersed-settled
cells can be tissue-relevant only if the cells maintain their 3D tissue state
during the multi-hour CRRC procedure. Here we propose an approach for assessing
tissue relevance of the CRRC-based analysis of the dispersed-settled cells. Our
approach utilizes cultured multicellular spheroids as a 3D cell model and cultured
cell monolayers as a 2D cell model. The CRRC results of the dispersed-settled cells
derived from spheroids are compared to those of spheroids and monolayers in
order to find if the dispersed-settled cells are representative of the
spheroids. To demonstrate its practical use, we applied this approach to a
cellular reaction of multi-drug-resistance (MRD) transport which was followed by extrusion of a
fluorescent substrate from the cells. The approach proved to be reliable
and revealed long-term maintenance of MDR transport in the dispersed-settled
cells obtained from cultured ovarian cancer spheroids. Accordingly, CRRC can be
used to determine accurately the size of a cell subpopulation with an elevated level
of MDR transport in tumor samples, which makes CRRC a suitable method for the development
of MDR-based predictors of chemoresistance. The proposed spheroid-based
approach for validation of CRRC is applicable to other types of cellular
reactions, and, thus, will be an indispensable tool for transforming CRRC from
an experimental technique into practical analytical tool.
Additional (zip) files contain supporting images, kinetic traces, and histograms. Their detailed descriptions are provided in the main pdf file.
Supplementary materials
Title
ImageStacks
Description
Actions
Title
KineticHistograms
Description
Actions
Title
KineticTraces
Description
Actions