Daily Application of Low Magnitude Mechanical Stimulus Inhibits the Growth of Mda-Mb Breast Cancer Cells in Vitro

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Date

2014

Authors

Özçivici, Engin

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

BioMed Central Ltd.

Open Access Color

GOLD

Green Open Access

Yes

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Publicly Funded

No
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Average
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Average
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Top 10%

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Abstract

Introduction: Mechanical loads can regulate cell proliferation and differentiation at various stages of development and homeostasis. However, the extension of this regulatory effect of mechanical loads on cancer cells is largely unknown. Increased physical compliance is one of the key features of cancer cells, which may hamper the transmission of mechanical loads to these cells within tumor microenvironment. Here we tested whether brief daily application of an external low magnitude mechanical stimulus (LMMS), would impede the growth of MDA-MB-231 aggressive type breast cancer cells in vitro for 3 wks of growth. Methods: The signal was applied in oscillatory form at 90 Hz and 0.15 g, a regimen that would induce mechanical loads on MDA-MB-231 cells via inertial properties of cells rather than matrix deformations. Experimental cells were exposed to LMMS 15 min/day, 5 days/week in ambient conditions while control cells were sham loaded. Cell proliferation, viability, cycle, apoptosis, morphology and migration were tested via Trypan Blue dye exclusion, MTT, PI, Annexin V, Calcein-AM and phalloidin stains and scratch wound assays. Results: Compared to sham controls, daily application of LMMS reduced the number and viability of cancerous MDA-MB-231 cells significantly after first week in the culture, while non-cancerous MCF10A cells were found to be unaffected. Flow cytomety analyses suggested that the observed decrease for the cancer cells in the LMMS group was due to a cell cycle arrest rather than apoptosis. LMMS further reduced cancer cell circularity and increased cytoskeletal actin in MDA-MB-231 cells. Conclusion: Combined, results suggest that direct application of mechanical loads negatively regulate the proliferation of aggressive type cancer cells. If confirmed, this non-invasive approach may be integrated to the efforts for the prevention and/or treatment of cancer.

Description

PubMed: 25349533

Keywords

Mechanical loading, MDA-MB-231, Physical activity, Breast cancer, Cancer Research, Cell Mechanics and Extracellular Matrix Interactions, Physiology, MDA-MB-231, Viability assay, Cancer cell, Apoptosis, Cancer research, Mechanical loading, Biochemistry, Breast cancer, In vitro, Molecular Mechanisms of Planarian Regeneration, Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, Health Sciences, Genetics, Cell Mechanics, Trypan blue, Molecular Biology, Internal medicine, Cancer, Physical activity, Life Sciences, Cell Biology, Chemistry, Oncology, FOS: Biological sciences, Physiological Effects of Space Travel and Microgravity, Medicine, Primary Research

Fields of Science

0301 basic medicine, 03 medical and health sciences, 0303 health sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Q1
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OpenCitations Citation Count
25

Source

Cancer Cell International

Volume

14

Issue

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End Page

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CrossRef : 5

Scopus : 22

PubMed : 12

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Mendeley Readers : 37

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22

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Web of Science™ Citations

21

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Page Views

1169

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Downloads

321

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