4.3 Article

Mechanical phenotype of cancer cells: cell softening and loss of stiffness sensing

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 6, Issue 25, Pages 20946-20958

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.4173

Keywords

matrix stiffness; mechanical phenotype; stiffness sensing; cell stiffness; caveolin-1

Funding

  1. National Science Council [NSC 101-2320-B-006-011-MY3]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST103-2320-B-006-044-MY3]

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The stiffness sensing ability is required to respond to the stiffness of the matrix. Here we determined whether normal cells and cancer cells display distinct mechanical phenotypes. Cancer cells were softer than their normal counterparts, regardless of the type of cancer (breast, bladder, cervix, pancreas, or Ha-RasV12-transformed cells). When cultured on matrices of varying stiffness, low stiffness decreased proliferation in normal cells, while cancer cells and transformed cells lost this response. Thus, cancer cells undergo a change in their mechanical phenotype that includes cell softening and loss of stiffness sensing. Caveolin-1, which is suppressed in many tumor cells and in oncogene-transformed cells, regulates the mechanical phenotype. Caveolin-1-upregulated RhoA activity and (Y397)FAK phosphorylation directed actin cap formation, which was positively correlated with cell elasticity and stiffness sensing in fibroblasts. Ha-Ras(V12)-induced transformation and changes in the mechanical phenotypes were reversed by re-expression of caveolin-1 and mimicked by the suppression of caveolin-1 in normal fibroblasts. This is the first study to describe this novel role for caveolin-1, linking mechanical phenotype to cell transformation. Furthermore, mechanical characteristics may serve as biomarkers for cell transformation.

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