Quantification of heparin's antimetastatic effect by single-cell force spectroscopy

Basic data of the doctoral examination procedure

Doctoral examination procedure finished at: Doctoral examination procedure at University of Münster
Period of time15/02/2016 - 26/07/2021
Statuscompleted
CandidateLiebsch, Aaron Gustav
Doctoral subjectMedizin
Doctoral degreeDr. med.
Form of the doctoral thesiscumulative
Awarded byDepartment 05 - Faculty of Medicine
SupervisorsSchillers, Hermann; Kehrel, Beate
ReviewersSchillers, Hermann; Kehrel, Beate

Description

In circulation, cancer cells induce platelet activation, leading to the formation of a cancer cell-encircling platelet cloak which facilitates each step of the metastatic cascade. Since cancer patients treated with the anticoagulant heparin showed reduced metastasis rates and improved survival, it is supposed that heparin suppresses the cloak's formation by inhibiting the interaction between platelet's adhesion molecule P-selectin with its ligands on cancer cells. To quantify this heparin effect, we developed a single-cell force spectroscopy approach and quantified the adhesion (maximum adhesion force [FA] and detachment work [WD]) between platelets and human non-small cell lung cancer cells (A549). A configuration was used in which A549 cells were glued to tipless cantilevers and force-distance (F-D) curves were recorded on a layer of activated platelets. The concentration-response relationship was determined for heparin at concentrations between 1 and 100 U/mL. Sigmoid dose-response fit revealed half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) values of 8.01 U/mL (FA) and 6.46 U/mL (WD) and a maximum decrease of the adhesion by 37.5% (FA) and 38.42% (WD). The effect of heparin on P-selectin was tested using anti-P-selectin antibodies alone and in combination with heparin. Adding heparin after antibody treatment resulted in an additional reduction of 9.52% (FA) and 7.12% (WD). Together, we quantified heparin's antimetastatic effect and proved that it predominantly is related to the blockage of P-selectin. Our approach represents a valuable method to investigate the adhesion of platelets to cancer cells and the efficiency of substances to block this interaction.

Promovend*in an der Universität Münster

Liebsch, Aaron Gustav
Institute of Forensic Medicine

Supervision at the University of Münster

Kehrel, Beate
Clinic for Anaesthesiology, Surgical Critical Care Medicine and Pain Therapy
Schillers, Hermann
Institute of Physiology II

Review at the University of Münster

Kehrel, Beate
Clinic for Anaesthesiology, Surgical Critical Care Medicine and Pain Therapy
Schillers, Hermann
Institute of Physiology II

Publications resulting from doctoral examination procedure

Liebsch Aaron Gustav, Schillers Hermann (2020)
In: Journal of Molecular Recognition, 34(1)
Type of Publication: Research article (journal)