4.3 Article

Tunable PEG Hydrogels for Discerning Differential Tumor Cell Response to Biomechanical Cues

Journal

ADVANCED BIOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adbi.202200084

Keywords

fibrosarcoma; hydrogel; poly(ethylene glycol); triple negative breast cancer; tumor microenvironment

Funding

  1. Duke Graduate School
  2. NIH T32 Training Grant

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Increased extracellular matrix (ECM) density in the tumor microenvironment influences tumor progression, and the effect varies between different tumor cell lines of epithelial and mesenchymal origin. Epithelial origin cell line proliferates more and forms more mature focal complexes in response to an increase in matrix adhesion sites, while mesenchymal origin cell line proliferates more in 2D culture but less in 3D culture, invades less, and forms more mature focal complexes in response to an increase in matrix stiffness.
Increased extracellular matrix (ECM) density in the tumor microenvironment has been shown to influence aspects of tumor progression such as proliferation and invasion. Increased matrix density means cells experience not only increased mechanical properties, but also a higher density of bioactive sites. Traditional in vitro ECM models like Matrigel and collagen do not allow these properties to be investigated independently. In this work, a poly(ethylene glycol)-based scaffold is used which modifies with integrin-binding sites for cell attachment and matrix metalloproteinase 2 and 9 sensitive sites for enzyme-mediated degradation. The polymer backbone density and binding site concentration are independently tuned and the effect each of these properties and their interaction have on the proliferation, invasion, and focal complex formation of two different tumor cell lines is evaluated. It is seen that the cell line of epithelial origin (Hs 578T, triple negative breast cancer) proliferates more, invades less, and forms more mature focal complexes in response to an increase in matrix adhesion sites. Conversely, the cell line of mesenchymal origin (HT1080, fibrosarcoma) proliferates more in 2D culture but less in 3D culture, invades less, and forms more mature focal complexes in response to an increase in matrix stiffness.

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