4.8 Article

Spatial collagen stiffening promotes collective breast cancer cell invasion by reinforcing extracellular matrix alignment

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 41, Issue 17, Pages 2458-2469

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-022-02258-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [NWO-TOP 02007]
  2. Dutch Cancer Society [KWF-2017-10456]
  3. European Union [731957]
  4. COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology) [CA19138]

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The study reveals that increased collagen bundling promotes breast cancer invasion, while advanced glycation end product crosslinking prevents collective invasion. The collective invasion of ductal breast cancer cells depends on Lysyl oxidase-like 3 produced by tumor cells.
The tumor micro-environment often contains stiff and irregular-bundled collagen fibers that are used by tumor cells to disseminate. It is still unclear how and to what extent, extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffness versus ECM bundle size and alignment dictate cancer cell invasion. Here, we have uncoupled Collagen-I bundling from stiffness by introducing inter-collagen crosslinks, combined with temperature induced aggregation of collagen bundling. Using organotypic models from mouse invasive ductal and invasive lobular breast cancers, we show that increased collagen bundling in 3D induces a generic increase in breast cancer invasion that is independent of migration mode. However, systemic collagen stiffening using advanced glycation end product (AGE) crosslinking prevents collective invasion, while leaving single cell invasion unaffected. Collective invasion into collagen matrices by ductal breast cancer cells depends on Lysyl oxidase-like 3 (Loxl3), a factor produced by tumor cells that reinforces local collagen stiffness. Finally, we present clinical evidence that collectively invading cancer cells at the invasive front of ductal breast carcinoma upregulate LOXL3. By uncoupling the mechanical, chemical, and structural cues that control invasion of breast cancer in three dimensions, our data reveal that spatial control over stiffness and bundling underlie collective dissemination of ductal-type breast cancers.

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