If you don't look, you won't see: intravital multiphoton imaging of primary and metastatic breast cancer.

  • Laura Bonapace
  • Jeffrey Wyckoff
  • Thomas G. Oertner
  • Van Rheenen Jacco
  • Tobias Junt
  • Mohamed Bentires-Alj

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Abstract

A fundamental hallmark of cancer is progression to metastasis and the growth of breast cancer metastases in lung, bone, liver and/or brain causes fatal complications. Unfortunately, the cellular and biochemical mechanisms of the metastatic process remain ill-defined. Recent application of intravital multiphoton microscopy (MP-IVM) to image fluorescently labeled cells in mouse models of cancer has allowed dynamic observation of this multi-step process at the cellular and subcellular levels. In this article, we discuss the use of MP-IVM in studies of breast cancer metastasis, as well as surgical techniques for exposing tumors prior to imaging. We also describe a versatile multiphoton microscope for imaging tumor-stroma interactions.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number2
ISSN1083-3021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.06.2012