Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"migration" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 The false promise of return to work for migrant workers injured on the job in Canada: When public policies intersect to create exclusion Hanley J; Ventura Sanchez G; Goswami P; Mayell S; McLaughlin J; Hennebry J; 40223307
SOCANTH
2 Genomics-Enabled Mixed-Stock Analysis Uncovers Intraspecific Migratory Complexity and Detects Unsampled Populations in a Harvested Fish Gibelli J; Won H; Michaelides S; Jeon HB; Fraser DJ; 39995301
BIOLOGY
3 Microfluidic Wound-Healing Assay for Comparative Study on Fluid Dynamic, Chemical and Mechanical Wounding on Microglia BV2 Migration Yazdanpanah Moghadam E; Sonenberg N; Packirisamy M; 39203655
ENCS
4 Microfluidic Wound-Healing Assay for ECM and Microenvironment Properties on Microglia BV2 Cells Migration Yazdanpanah Moghadam E; Sonenberg N; Packirisamy M; 36832056
ENCS
5 Parity and Psychosocial Risk Factors Increase the Risk of Depression During Pregnancy Among Recent Immigrant Women in Canada Vaillancourt M; Lane V; Ditto B; Da Costa D; 34595614
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Multi-tissue patterning drives anterior morphogenesis of the C. elegans embryo. Grimbert S, Mastronardi K, Richard V, Christensen R, Law C, Zardoui K, Fay D, Piekny A 33309948
BIOLOGY
7 Cancer cells optimize elasticity for efficient migration. Kashani AS; Packirisamy M; 33204453
ENCS
8 Beyond the Usual Suspects and Towards Politicisation: Immigration in Quebec's Party Manifestos, 1991-2018. Xhardez C, Paquet M 32837335
CONCORDIA
9 Precarity and Aging: A Scoping Review. Grenier A, Hatzifilalithis S, Laliberte-Rudman D, Kobayashi K, Marier P, Phillipson C 31675418
CONCORDIA
10 Transnational Migration and Digital Memorialization. Sultana B, Youngs-Zaleski M, Jiwani Y 31237819
CONCORDIA

 

Title:Cancer cells optimize elasticity for efficient migration.
Authors:Kashani ASPackirisamy M
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33204453
DOI:10.1098/rsos.200747
Publication:Royal Society open science
Keywords:cancer cellscell bulk elasticitycell invasioncell mechanobiologycell migrationmigratory index
PMID:33204453 Category:R Soc Open Sci Date Added:2020-11-20
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Optical Bio-Microsystem Lab, Micro-Nano-Bio-Integration Center, Department of Mechanical, Industrial and Aerospace Engineering, Concordia University, 1455 De Maisonneuve Boulevard West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3G 1M8.

Description:

Cancer progression is associated with alternations in the cytoskeletal architecture of cells and, consequently, their mechanical properties such as stiffness. Changing the mechanics of cells enables cancer cells to migrate and invade to distant organ sites. This process, metastasis, is the main reason for cancer-related mortality. Cell migration is an essential step towards increasing the invasive potential of cells. Although many studies have shown that the migratory speed and the invasion of cells can be inversely correlated to the stiffness of cells, some other investigations indicate opposing results. In the current work, based on the strain energy stored in cells due to the contractile forces, we defined an energy-dependent term, migratory index, to approximate how changes in the mechanical properties of cells influence cell migration required for cancer progression. Cell migration involves both cell deformation and force transmission within cells. The effects of these two parameters can be represented equally by the migratory index. Our mechanical modelling and computational study show that cells depending on their shape, size and other physical parameters have a maximum migratory index taking place at a specific range of cell bulk elasticity, indicating the most favourable conditions for invasive mobility. This approximate model could be used to explain why the stiffness of cells varies during cancer progression. We believe that the stiffness of cancer or malignant cells depending on the stiffness of their normal or non-malignant counterparts is either decreased or increased to reach the critical condition in which the mobility potential of cells is approximated to be maximum.

PMID: 33204453 [PubMed]





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