Abstract Breast cancer progression is marked by extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling, including increased stiffness, faster stress relaxation, and elevated collagen levels. In vitro experiments have revealed a role for each of these factors to individually promote malignant behavior, but their combined effects remain unclear. To address this, we developed alginate-collagen hydrogels with independently tunable stiffness, stress relaxation, and collagen density. We show that these combined tumor-mimicking ECM cues reinforced invasive morphologies and promoted spheroid invasion in breast cancer and mammary epithelial cells. High stiffness and low collagen density in slow-relaxing matrices led to the greatest cell migration speed and displacement. RNA-seq revealed Sp1 target gene enrichment in response to both individual and combined ECM cues, with a greater enrichment observed under multiple cues. Notably, high expression of Sp1 target genes upregulated by fast stress relaxation correlated with poor patient survival. Mechanistically, we found that phosphorylated-Sp1 (T453) was increasingly located in the nucleus in stiff and/or fast relaxing matrices, which was regulated by PI3K and ERK1/2 signaling, as well as actomyosin contractility. This study emphasizes how multiple ECM cues in complex microenvironments reinforce malignant traits and supports an emerging role for Sp1 as a mechanoresponsive transcription factor.
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DDR2 signaling and mechanosensing orchestrate neuroblastoma cell fate through different transcriptome mechanisms
The extracellular matrix (ECM) regulates carcinogenesis by interacting with cancer cells via cell surface receptors. Discoidin Domain Receptor 2 (DDR2) is a collagen‐activated receptor implicated in cell survival, growth, and differentiation. Dysregulated DDR2 expression has been identified in various cancer types, making it as a promising therapeutic target. Additionally, cancer cells exhibit mechanosensing abilities, detecting changes in ECM stiffness, which is particularly important for carcinogenesis given the observed ECM stiffening in numerous cancer types. Despite these, whether collagen‐activated DDR2 signaling and ECM stiffness‐induced mechanosensing exert similar effects on cancer cell behavior and whether they operate through analogous mechanisms remain elusive. To address these questions, we performed bulk RNA sequencing (RNA‐seq) on human SH‐SY5Y neuroblastoma cells cultured on collagen‐coated substrates. Our results show that DDR2 downregulation induces significant changes in the cell transcriptome, with changes in expression of 15% of the genome, specifically affecting the genes associated with cell division and differentiation. We validated the RNA‐seq results by showing that DDR2 knockdown redirects the cell fate from proliferation to senescence. Like DDR2 knockdown, increasing substrate stiffness diminishes cell proliferation. Surprisingly, RNA‐seq indicates that substrate stiffness has no detectable effect on the transcriptome. Furthermore, DDR2 knockdown influences cellular responses to substrate stiffness changes, highlighting a crosstalk between these two ECM‐induced signaling pathways. Based on our results, we propose that the ECM could activate DDR2 signaling and mechanosensing in cancer cells to orchestrate their cell fate through distinct mechanisms, with or without involving gene expression, thus providing novel mechanistic insights into cancer progression.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2150076
- PAR ID:
- 10530867
- Publisher / Repository:
- FEBS Press
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- FEBS Open Bio
- Volume:
- 14
- Issue:
- 5
- ISSN:
- 2211-5463
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 867 to 882
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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