The study of metastasis-competent cells at the single-cell level represents an opportunity to decipher the molecular mechanisms associated with the metastatic cascade as well as to understand the functional and molecular heterogeneity of these cells. In this context, preclinical in vivo models of cancer metastasis are valuable tools to understand the behavior of cancer cells throughout the process. Here we describe a detailed protocol for the isolation and recovery of individual viable human metastatic cells from zebrafish embryos xenotransplanted with cancer cells for downstream molecular analysis. We cover the critical steps for the dissociation of the xenografted zebrafish embryos to generate a single-cell suspension, and the micromanipulation for their recovery as single cells. © 2024. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
Pablo Hurtado, Inés Martínez-Pena, Roberto Piñeiro. Single-Cell Recovery from Tumor Cell Xenotransplanted Zebrafish Embryos for the Study of Metastasis-Initiating Cells. Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.). 2024;2752:53-63
PMID: 38194027
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