4.7 Article

Flow of a circulating tumor cell and red blood cells in microvessels

期刊

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
卷 92, 期 6, 页码 -

出版社

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.92.063011

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资金

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [24680048, 25000008, 26107703, 14J03967]
  2. Tohoku University Division for International Advanced Research and Education Organization
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [14J03967, 25000008, 26107703, 24680048, 26242039] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Quantifying the behavior of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the blood stream is of fundamental importance for understanding metastasis. Here, we investigate the flowmode and velocity of CTCs interactingwith red blood cells (RBCs) in various sized microvessels. The flow of leukocytes in microvessels has been described previously; a leukocyte forms a train with RBCs in small microvessels and exhibits margination in large microvessels. Important differences in the physical properties of leukocytes and CTCs result from size. The dimensions of leukocytes are similar to those of RBCs, but CTCs are significantly larger. We investigate numerically the size effects on the flow mode and the cell velocity, and we identify similarities and differences between leukocytes and CTCs. We find that a transition from train formation to margination occurs when (R-a)/t(R) approximate to 1, where R is the vessel radius, a is the cell radius, and t(R) is the thickness of RBCs, but that the motion of RBCs differs from the case of leukocytes. Our results also show that the velocities of CTCs and leukocytes are larger than the average blood velocity, but only CTCs move faster than RBCs for microvessels of R/a approximate to 1.5-2.0. These findings are expected to be useful not only for understanding metastasis, but also for developing microfluidic devices.

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