4.6 Article

From Microspikes to Stress Fibers: Actin Remodeling in Breast Acini Drives Myosin II-Mediated Basement Membrane Invasion

Journal

CELLS
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10081979

Keywords

filopodia; invadopodia; focal adhesion; basement membrane disruption; breast cancer invasion; actomyosin; cell force; mechanical probing; epithelial mechanobiology

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgesellschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [363055819/GRK2415, SPP1782, H02384/2, ME1458/8]

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The study reveals that actin microspikes are used as functional precursors for filopodia to initiate basement membrane penetration and widen collagen IV pores to anchor within the membrane scaffold via force-transmitting focal adhesions. Pre-invasive basal cells exhibit predominantly cortical actin networks and actin microspikes, which convert into highly contractile stress fibers in response to pro-invasive conditions. Ultimately, these EMT-related cytoskeletal adaptations are critical mechanisms inducing the invasive transition of benign breast acini.
The cellular mechanisms of basement membrane (BM) invasion remain poorly understood. We investigated the invasion-promoting mechanisms of actin cytoskeleton reorganization in BM-covered MCF10A breast acini. High-resolution confocal microscopy has characterized actin cell protrusion formation and function in response to tumor-resembling ECM stiffness and soluble EGF stimulation. Traction force microscopy quantified the mechanical BM stresses that invasion-triggered acini exerted on the BM-ECM interface. We demonstrate that acini use non-proteolytic actin microspikes as functional precursors of elongated protrusions to initiate BM penetration and ECM probing. Further, these microspikes mechanically widened the collagen IV pores to anchor within the BM scaffold via force-transmitting focal adhesions. Pre-invasive basal cells located at the BM-ECM interface exhibited predominantly cortical actin networks and actin microspikes. In response to pro-invasive conditions, these microspikes accumulated and converted subsequently into highly contractile stress fibers. The phenotypical switch to stress fiber cells matched spatiotemporally with emerging high BM stresses that were driven by actomyosin II contractility. The activation of proteolytic invadopodia with MT1-MMP occurred at later BM invasion stages and only in cells already disseminating into the ECM. Our study demonstrates that BM pore-widening filopodia bridge mechanical ECM probing function and contractility-driven BM weakening. Finally, these EMT-related cytoskeletal adaptations are critical mechanisms inducing the invasive transition of benign breast acini.

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