Microfluidic live tracking and transcriptomics of cancer-immune cell doublets link intercellular proximity and gene regulation.
Bianca de Cássia Troncarelli FloresSmriti ChawlaNing MaChad SanadaPraveen Kumar KujurRudy YeungMargot B BellonKyle HukariBrian FowlerMark LynchLudmilla T D ChinenNaveen RamalingamDebarka SenguptaStefanie S JeffreyPublished in: Communications biology (2022)
Cell-cell communication and physical interactions play a vital role in cancer initiation, homeostasis, progression, and immune response. Here, we report a system that combines live capture of different cell types, co-incubation, time-lapse imaging, and gene expression profiling of doublets using a microfluidic integrated fluidic circuit that enables measurement of physical distances between cells and the associated transcriptional profiles due to cell-cell interactions. We track the temporal variations in natural killer-triple-negative breast cancer cell distances and compare them with terminal cellular transcriptome profiles. The results show the time-bound activities of regulatory modules and allude to the existence of transcriptional memory. Our experimental and bioinformatic approaches serve as a proof of concept for interrogating live-cell interactions at doublet resolution. Together, our findings highlight the use of our approach across different cancers and cell types.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- immune response
- cell therapy
- gene expression
- stem cells
- high throughput
- papillary thyroid
- genome wide
- squamous cell carcinoma
- young adults
- high resolution
- cell death
- inflammatory response
- mesenchymal stem cells
- working memory
- induced apoptosis
- circulating tumor cells
- cell proliferation
- bone marrow
- dendritic cells