4.6 Article

Estrogen Modulates Epithelial Breast Cancer Cell Mechanics and Cell-to-Cell Contacts

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma14112897

Keywords

cell mechanics; breast cancer; estrogen; AFM; viscoelasticity; E-cadherin; confocal microscopy

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Agency (FWF) [29562-N62]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [SAF2017-84934-R]

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The study found that estrogen softens MCF-7 breast cancer cells, while cells in hormone-free medium lead to an increase in elastic and viscoelastic moduli. Additionally, cells cultured under estrogenic conditions show changes in E-cadherin distribution and weakened cell-cell contacts.
Excessive estrogen exposure is connected with increased risk of breast cancer and has been shown to promote epithelial-mesenchymal-transition. Malignant cancer cells accumulate changes in cell mechanical and biochemical properties, often leading to cell softening. In this work we have employed atomic force microscopy to probe the influence of estrogen on the viscoelastic properties of MCF-7 breast cancer cells cultured either in normal or hormone free-medium. Estrogen led to a significant softening of the cells in all studied cases, while growing cells in hormone free medium led to an increase in the studied elastic and viscoelastic moduli. In addition, fluorescence microscopy shows that E-cadherin distribution is changed in cells when culturing them under estrogenic conditions. Furthermore, cell-cell contacts seemed to be weakened. These results were supported by AFM imaging showing changes in surfaces roughness, cell-cell contacts and cell height as result of estrogen treatment. This study therefore provides further evidence for the role of estrogen signaling in breast cancer.

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