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Mass Spectrometry

Spying on early ovarian cancer with mass spec imaging

New technique tracks messenger molecules traveling between migrating cancer cells and ovarian tissue

by Louisa Dalton, special to C&EN
October 17, 2018

Illustration of a mouse ovary sitting in agarose gel next to fallopian tube cancer cells. Mass spectrometry image shows colored dots surrounding a white circle indicating location of ovary in the gel.
Credit: ACS Cent. Sci.
A mouse ovary is placed in an agarose gel next to fallopian tube cancer cells (top). A mass spectrometry image (bottom) reveals norepinephrine fanning out from the ovary.

By the time ovarian cancer is discovered in a patient, the disease is often alarmingly advanced. That’s why less than half of women diagnosed with ovarian cancer survive past five years. And it’s why scientists would love to get a better understanding of how ovarian cancer starts and how it spreads. A new study uses mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) to do just that, by exposing the early chemical drivers of ovarian cancer (ACS Cent. Sci. 2018, DOI: 10.1021/acscentsci.8b00405).

A few years ago, researchers discovered that most ovarian cancers actually begin in a fallopian tube and make the ovary their second home. Joanna E. Burdette, a women’s health researcher at the University of Illinois, Chicago, wondered if some sort of early communication occurs between cancer cells in the fallopian tube and the ovarian cells. If so, Burdette didn’t have a technique for eavesdropping on that back-and-forth.

Fortunately, Laura M. Sanchez, Burdette’s colleague at UIC, specializes in tracking the small messenger molecules that shuttle between cells with MSI. Her snapshots reveal the position and mass-to-charge ratio of molecules in a three-dimensional tissue culture, creating “a molecular map of a biological sample,” she says.

Using MSI, Sanchez, Burdette, and colleagues designed a stakeout of cancer cells’ communication with mouse ovaries. They removed ovaries from mice and placed them in wells of agarose gel with either cancerous mouse fallopian tube cells or normal fallopian tube cells. They let the cells grow for four days and then dried each sample flat for imaging with matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry.

Thirty-three signals corresponding to particular mass-to-charge ratios showed up significantly more frequently in wells holding cancer cells compared with wells of healthy cells. One particularly strong signal came from norepinephrine, a neurotransmitter released by neurons in the fight-or-flight response and also by the ovary as part of the ovulation cycle. Studies have linked stress-induced norepinephrine to aggressive ovarian cancer, yet researchers didn’t have a way of pinpointing norepinephrine’s source as the cancer takes hold.

To determine which cells were releasing norepinephrine—the fallopian tube cancer cells or the ovarian cells—the researchers divided a well and placed the ovary on one side and the cancerous fallopian tube cells on the other. After four days, they found norepinephrine fanning out from the ovary to the cancer cells.

Structure of norepinephrine.

The researchers suspect that the cancer cells are somehow hijacking the ovary cells to induce a come-hither message. That norepinephrine message could be triggered by an initial signal coming from the fallopian tube cancer cells during those first four days. They are now focusing on tracking that signal, as well as describing other signals in the mix.

Amanda B. Hummon of Ohio State University, who was not involved in the study, says the technique could be useful in her own research on colon cancer metastasis. “I think it is a beautiful example of developing an analytical method to go after a really important question in cancer biology.”

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Sanchez believes the technique is an especially powerful tool for cancer research. Looking for chemical gradients in the tumor microenvironment “is a totally different way of looking at and thinking about cancer,” she says. Their setup can address any number of questions about cellular communication, she adds.

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