Michelle B. Chen
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Michelle B. Chen.
Integrative Biology | 2013
Michelle B. Chen; Jordan Ari Whisler; Jessie S. Jeon; Roger D. Kamm
A deeper understanding of the mechanisms of tumor cell extravasation is essential in creating therapies that target this crucial step in cancer metastasis. Here, we use a microfluidic platform to study tumor cell extravasation from in vitro microvascular networks formed via vasculogenesis. We demonstrate tight endothelial cell-cell junctions, basement membrane deposition and physiological values of vessel permeability. Employing our assay, we demonstrate impaired endothelial barrier function and increased extravasation efficiency with inflammatory cytokine stimulation, as well as positive correlations between the metastatic potentials of MDA-MB-231, HT-1080, MCF-10A and their extravasation capabilities. High-resolution time-lapse microscopy reveals the highly dynamic nature of extravasation events, beginning with thin tumor cell protrusions across the endothelium followed by extrusion of the remainder of the cell body through the formation of small (~1 μm) openings in the endothelial barrier which grows in size (~8 μm) to allow for nuclear transmigration. No disruption to endothelial cell-cell junctions is discernible at 60×, or by changes in local barrier function after completion of transmigration. Tumor transendothelial migration efficiency is significantly higher in trapped cells compared to non-trapped adhered cells, and in cell clusters versus single tumor cells.
Cancer Discovery | 2016
Asaf Spiegel; Mary W. Brooks; Houshyar S; Ferenc Reinhardt; Michele Ardolino; Fessler E; Michelle B. Chen; Krall Ja; J. DeCock; Ioannis K. Zervantonakis; Alexandre Iannello; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Cortez-Retamozo; Roger D. Kamm; Mikael J. Pittet; David H. Raulet; Robert A. Weinberg
UNLABELLED Immune cells promote the initial metastatic dissemination of carcinoma cells from primary tumors. In contrast to their well-studied functions in the initial stages of metastasis, the specific roles of immunocytes in facilitating progression through the critical later steps of the invasion-metastasis cascade remain poorly understood. Here, we define novel functions of neutrophils in promoting intraluminal survival and extravasation at sites of metastatic dissemination. We show that CD11b(+)/Ly6G(+) neutrophils enhance metastasis formation via two distinct mechanisms. First, neutrophils inhibit natural killer cell function, which leads to a significant increase in the intraluminal survival time of tumor cells. Thereafter, neutrophils operate to facilitate extravasation of tumor cells through the secretion of IL1β and matrix metalloproteinases. These results identify neutrophils as key regulators of intraluminal survival and extravasation through their cross-talk with host cells and disseminating carcinoma cells. SIGNIFICANCE This study provides important insights into the systemic contributions of neutrophils to cancer metastasis by identifying how neutrophils facilitate intermediate steps of the invasion-metastasis cascade. We demonstrate that neutrophils suppress natural killer cell activity and increase extravasation of tumor cells. Cancer Discov; 6(6); 630-49. ©2016 AACR.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 561.
Integrative Biology | 2014
Jessie S. Jeon; Simone Bersini; Jordan Ari Whisler; Michelle B. Chen; Gabriele Dubini; Joseph L. Charest; Matteo Moretti; Roger D. Kamm
The generation of functional microvascular networks is critical for the development of advanced in vitro models to replicate pathophysiological conditions. Mural cells provide structural support to blood vessels and secrete biomolecules contributing to vessel stability and functionality. We investigated the role played by two endothelium-related molecules, angiopoietin (Ang-1) and transforming growth factor (TGF-β1), on bone marrow-derived human mesenchymal stem cell (BM-hMSC) phenotypic transition toward a mural cell lineage, both in monoculture and in direct contact with human endothelial cells (ECs), within 3D fibrin gels in microfluidic devices. We demonstrated that the effect of these molecules is dependent on direct heterotypic cell-cell contact. Moreover, we found a significant increase in the amount of α-smooth muscle actin in microvascular networks with added VEGF and TGF-β1 or VEGF and Ang-1 compared to networks with added VEGF alone. However, the addition of TGF-β1 generated a non-interconnected microvasculature, while Ang-1 promoted functional networks, confirmed by microsphere perfusion and permeability measurements. The presence of mural cell-like BM-hMSCs coupled with the addition of Ang-1 increased the number of network branches and reduced mean vessel diameter compared to EC only vasculature. This system has promising applications in the development of advanced in vitro models to study complex biological phenomena involving functional and perfusable microvascular networks.
Nature Protocols | 2017
Michelle B. Chen; Jordan Ari Whisler; Julia Fröse; Cathy Yu; Yoojin Shin; Roger D. Kamm
Distant metastasis, which results in >90% of cancer-related deaths, is enabled by hematogenous dissemination of tumor cells via the circulation. This requires the completion of a sequence of complex steps including transit, initial arrest, extravasation, survival and proliferation. Increased understanding of the cellular and molecular players enabling each of these steps is key to uncovering new opportunities for therapeutic intervention during early metastatic dissemination. As a protocol extension, this article describes an adaptation to our existing protocol describing a microfluidic platform that offers additional applications. This protocol describes an in vitro model of the human microcirculation with the potential to recapitulate discrete steps of early metastatic seeding, including arrest, transendothelial migration and early micrometastases formation. The microdevice features self-organized human microvascular networks formed over 4–5 d, after which the tumor can be perfused and extravasation events are easily tracked over 72 h via standard confocal microscopy. Contrary to most in vivo and in vitro extravasation assays, robust and rapid scoring of extravascular cells, combined with high-resolution imaging, can be easily achieved because of the confinement of the vascular network to one plane close to the surface of the device. This renders extravascular cells clearly distinct and allows tumor cells of interest to be identified quickly as compared with those in thick tissues. The ability to generate large numbers of devices (∼36) per experiment further allows for highly parametric studies, which are required when testing multiple genetic or pharmacological perturbations. This is coupled with the capability for live tracking of single-cell extravasation events, allowing both tumor and endothelial morphological dynamics to be observed in high detail with a moderate number of data points.
Cancer Research | 2016
Michelle B. Chen; John M. Lamar; Ran Li; Richard O. Hynes; Roger D. Kamm
Tumor integrin β1 (ITGB1) contributes to primary tumor growth and metastasis, but its specific roles in extravasation have not yet been clearly elucidated. In this study, we engineered a three-dimensional microfluidic model of the human microvasculature to recapitulate the environment wherein extravasation takes place and assess the consequences of β1 depletion in cancer cells. Combined with confocal imaging, these tools allowed us to decipher the detailed morphology of transmigrating tumor cells and associated endothelial cells in vitro at high spatio-temporal resolution not easily achieved in conventional transmigration assays. Dynamic imaging revealed that β1-depleted cells lacked the ability to sustain protrusions into the subendothelial matrix in contrast with control cells. Specifically, adhesion via α3β1 and α6β1 to subendothelial laminin was a critical prerequisite for successful transmigration. β1 was required to invade past the endothelial basement membrane, whereas its attenuation in a syngeneic tumor model resulted in reduced metastatic colonization of the lung, an effect not observed upon depletion of other integrin alpha and beta subunits. Collectively, our findings in this novel model of the extravasation microenvironment revealed a critical requirement for β1 in several steps of extravasation, providing new insights into the mechanisms underlying metastasis. Cancer Res; 76(9); 2513-24. ©2016 AACR.
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Xuan Cao; Emad Moeendarbary; Philipp Isermann; Patricia M. Davidson; Xiao Wang; Michelle B. Chen; Anya K. Burkart; Jan Lammerding; Roger D. Kamm; Vivek B. Shenoy
It is now evident that the cell nucleus undergoes dramatic shape changes during important cellular processes such as cell transmigration through extracellular matrix and endothelium. Recent experimental data suggest that during cell transmigration the deformability of the nucleus could be a limiting factor, and the morphological and structural alterations that the nucleus encounters can perturb genomic organization that in turn influences cellular behavior. Despite its importance, a biophysical model that connects the experimentally observed nuclear morphological changes to the underlying biophysical factors during transmigration through small constrictions is still lacking. Here, we developed a universal chemomechanical model that describes nuclear strains and shapes and predicts thresholds for the rupture of the nuclear envelope and for nuclear plastic deformation during transmigration through small constrictions. The model includes actin contraction and cytosolic back pressure that squeeze the nucleus through constrictions and overcome the mechanical resistance from deformation of the nucleus and the constrictions. The nucleus is treated as an elastic shell encompassing a poroelastic material representing the nuclear envelope and inner nucleoplasm, respectively. Tuning the chemomechanical parameters of different components such as cell contractility and nuclear and matrix stiffnesses, our model predicts the lower bounds of constriction size for successful transmigration. Furthermore, treating the chromatin as a plastic material, our model faithfully reproduced the experimentally observed irreversible nuclear deformations after transmigration in lamin-A/C-deficient cells, whereas the wild-type cells show much less plastic deformation. Along with making testable predictions, which are in accord with our experiments and existing literature, our work provides a realistic framework to assess the biophysical modulators of nuclear deformation during cell transmigration.
Cancer Research | 2015
Michelle B. Chen; John M. Lamar; Roger D. Kamm; Richard O. Hynes
It has been shown that the tumor beta-1 integrin subunit plays an important role in primary tumor growth and metastasis. However, the specific role of beta-1 in the tumor cell extravasation cascade has not yet been clearly elucidated. This is partly due to the lack of extravasation models that possess high throughput and spatio-temporal resolution of each step in the cascade, which consists of tumor-endothelium arrest, transendothelial migration, and migration into the sub-endothelial matrix. To address this question, we employ multiple in vitro microfluidic platforms to recapitulate the extravasation microenvironment, allowing us to decipher in high spatio-temporal resolution, the specific extravasation defects associated with shRNA mediated beta-1 integrin knockdown in MDA-MB-231, MA2 and SUM 159 cell lines. These models include perfusable HUVEC microvascular networks embedded in a fibrin-collagen hydrogel and an upright HUVEC monolayer on a collagen gel that allows for detailed in-plane observation of 3D extravasation events. We first show that beta-1 knockdown drastically decreases extravasation efficiency in both assays, and further validated the defect in an in vivo mouse lung metastasis model. To explain the overall decreased ability to extravasate, we employed our assays to visualize and quantify each step in the extravasation cascade. First, we show that the retention rate of beta-1 knockdowns is significantly decreased under flow in microvascular networks. This suggests that beta-1 mediates adhesion to the endothelium, which was confirmed by a reduced adhesion rate under shear flow on a planar monolayer. Next, using the upright monolayer assay, we observed via time-lapse confocal microscopy that while beta-1 knockdowns assume a rounded morphology and extends nearly no protrusions past the endothelial barrier, their ability to open the endothelium was not significantly affected. However, beta-1 knockdowns were unable to fully invade past the endothelium and remained intercalated between endothelial cells. Further analysis revealed that extravasated beta-1 knockdown cells remained closely associated with the endothelium, while control cells migrated farther out into the sub-endothelial matrix. Immunostaining of the basement membrane protein collagen IV showed that transmigrated beta-1 knockdown cells were found trapped between the endothelial and col IV layers, suggesting that the close association with the endothelium is partly due to the inability to breach the basement membrane. Taken together, our results indicate that beta-1 is required for tumor cell extravasation by mediating tumor-endothelial adhesion and invasion into the subendothelial matrix, post-endothelial breaching. Citation Format: Michelle B. Chen, John M. Lamar, Roger D. Kamm, Richard O. Hynes. Role of tumor beta-1 integrin in the tumor cell extravasation cascade. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 106th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2015 Apr 18-22; Philadelphia, PA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2015;75(15 Suppl):Abstract nr 306. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2015-306
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018
Michelle B. Chen; Cynthia Hajal; David C. Benjamin; Cathy Yu; Hesham Azizgolshani; Richard O. Hynes; Roger D. Kamm
Significance Systemic inflammation that occurs during the course of tumor treatment is often correlated with adverse oncological outcomes independent of the infectious insult. As the first line of defense against infection, it is likely that neutrophils play an important role in modulating the progression of distant metastases in these scenarios. This study uses a multiplexed microfluidic model of human microcirculation combined with LPS-stimulated neutrophils as a model of systemic infection to probe the dynamic interactions between intravascular tumor cells and neutrophils at high spatiotemporal resolutions. We uncover chemokine-dependent neutrophil migration patterns which result in enhanced tumor cell extravasation rates. These findings may provide a basis for inhibiting the proextravasation and possibly prometastatic effect of inflamed neutrophils. Systemic inflammation occurring around the course of tumor progression and treatment are often correlated with adverse oncological outcomes. As such, it is suspected that neutrophils, the first line of defense against infection, may play important roles in linking inflammation and metastatic seeding. To decipher the dynamic roles of inflamed neutrophils during hematogenous dissemination, we employ a multiplexed microfluidic model of the human microvasculature enabling physiologically relevant transport of circulating cells combined with real-time, high spatial resolution observation of heterotypic cell–cell interactions. LPS-stimulated neutrophils (PMNs) and tumor cells (TCs) form heterotypic aggregates under flow, and arrest due to both mechanical trapping and neutrophil–endothelial adhesions. Surprisingly, PMNs are not static following aggregation, but exhibit a confined migration pattern near TC–PMN clusters. We discover that PMNs are chemotactically confined by self-secreted IL-8 and tumor-derived CXCL-1, which are immobilized by the endothelial glycocalyx. This results in significant neutrophil sequestration with arrested tumor cells, leading to the spatial localization of neutrophil-derived IL-8, which also contributes to increasing the extravasation potential of adjacent tumor cells through modulation of the endothelial barrier. Strikingly similar migration patterns and extravasation behaviors were also observed in an in vivo zebrafish model upon PMN–tumor cell coinjection into the embryo vasculature. These insights into the temporal dynamics of intravascular tumor–PMN interactions elucidate the mechanisms through which inflamed neutrophils can exert proextravasation effects at the distant metastatic site.
Archive | 2018
Michelle B. Chen; Roger Dale Kamm; Emad Moeendarbary
Three-dimensional complex biomechanical interactions occur from the initial steps of tumor formation to the later phases of cancer metastasis. Conventional monolayer cultures cannot recapitulate the complex microenvironment and chemical and mechanical cues that tumor cells experience during their metastatic journey, nor the complexity of their interactions with other, noncancerous cells. As alternative approaches, various engineered models have been developed to recapitulate specific features of each step of metastasis with tunable microenvironments to test a variety of mechanistic hypotheses. Here the main recent advances in the technologies that provide deeper insight into the process of cancer dissemination are discussed, with an emphasis on three-dimensional and mechanical factors as well as interactions between multiple cell types.
Cell Reports | 2018
Julia Fröse; Michelle B. Chen; Katie E. Hebron; Ferenc Reinhardt; Cynthia Hajal; Andries Zijlstra; Roger D. Kamm; Robert A. Weinberg
SUMMARY The epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) endows carcinoma cells with traits needed to complete many of the steps leading to metastasis formation, but its contributions specifically to the late step of extravasation remain understudied. We find that breast cancer cells that have undergone an EMT extravasate more efficiently from blood vessels both in vitro and in vivo. Analysis of gene expression changes associated with the EMT program led to the identification of an EMTinduced cell-surface protein, podocalyxin (PODXL), as a key mediator of extravasation in mesenchymal breast and pancreatic carcinoma cells. PODXL promotes extravasation through direct interaction of its intracellular domain with the cytoskeletal linker protein ezrin. Ezrin proceeds to establish dorsal cortical polarity, enabling the transition of cancer cells from a non-polarized, rounded cell morphology to an invasive extravasation-competent shape. Hence, the EMT program can directly enhance the efficiency of extravasation and subsequent metastasis formation through a PODXL-ezrin signaling axis.