4.6 Article

Mechanotransduction of Strain Regulates an Invasive Phenotype in Newly Transformed Epithelial Cells

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PHYSICS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fphy.2021.654613

Keywords

cyclic stretching; machanotransduction; oncogene; epithelial monolayer; microenvironment; invasive phenotype; strain; extrusion

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)
  2. NSERC Postgraduate Scholarships-Doctoral (PGS D)
  3. Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation
  4. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)
  5. Canada Research Chairs (CRC) program

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This study investigates the effects of mechanical stretch on epithelial cells, revealing that mechanical strain leads to a more invasive phenotype in transformed cells and alters the metastatic phenotype. The mechanical strain changes the actin cytoskeleton and adhesion complexes of the cells, resulting in a more dynamic invasive system.
Our organs and tissues are in constant motion, exposing epithelial cells to mechanical stretch. How these external forces impact cellular morphology, organization and dynamics in healthy and diseased tissues is still being elucidated. Carcinoma, the most common type of cancer, develops in the sheets of cells forming the epithelium and lining our organs and cavities. It usually begins with the transformation of a single cell via the activation of oncogenes such as Ras. Here, we show in a model system how mechanical stretch in epithelial sheets results in a more invasive phenotype in transformed cells. Cyclic strain impedes the apical extrusion of Ras(V12) cells from the healthy monolayer and prevents the formation of strong circumferential belts of actin in Ras(V12) cells. Concurrently, strain also changes the metastatic phenotype of newly transformed cells by greatly promoting the formation of Ras(V12) protrusions, potentially making them harder to be eliminated from healthy tissues. We also show that Ras(V12) and wild type MDCK cells possess distinct sensitivity to strain. External forces remodel their actin cytoskeletons and adhesion complexes differently, resulting in a more invasive system dynamic. Our work demonstrates that the Rho-ROCK mechanotransduction pathway is involved in regulating a mechanically-induced switch to a more invasive phenotype. The insights gained in this study reveal that the complex dynamics at play in healthy and transformed epithelial cells is drastically different in a mechanically active microenvironment when compared to static conditions.

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