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Cell competition in epithelial tissue eliminates transformed cells expressing activated oncoproteins to maintain epithelial homeostasis. Although the process is now understood to be of mechanochemical origin, direct mechanical characterization and associated biochemical underpinnings are lacking. Here, we employ tissue-scale stress and compressibility measurements and theoretical modeling to unveil a mechanical imbalance between normal and transformed cells, which drives cell competition. In the mouse intestinal epithelium and epithelial monolayer, transformed cells get compacted during competition. Stress microscopy reveals an emergent compressive stress at the transformed loci leading to this compaction. A cell-based self-propelled Voronoi model predicts that this compressive stress originates from a difference in the collective compressibility of the competing populations. A new collective compressibility measurement technique named gel compression microscopy then elucidates a two-fold higher compressibility of the transformed population than the normal population. Mechanistically, weakened cell-cell adhesions due to reduced junctional abundance of E-cadherin in the transformed cells render them collectively more compressible than normal cells. Taken together, our findings unveil a mechanical basis for epithelial homeostasis against oncogenic transformations with implications in epithelial defense against cancer.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available January 2, 2026
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Das, Tamal Kanti; Rodriguez Treviño, Agustin M.; Pandiri, Sanjay; Irvankoski, Sini; Siitonen, Juha H.; Rodriguez, Sara M.; Yousufuddin, Muhammed; Kürti, László (, Green Chemistry)Both metal-catalyzed and organocatalytic transfer hydrogenation reactions are widely employed for the reduction of CO and CN bonds. However, selective transfer hydrogenation reactions of CC bonds remain challenging. Therefore, the chemoselective transfer hydrogenation of olefins under mild conditions and in the absence of metal catalysts, using readily available and inexpensive reducing agents ( i.e. primary and secondary alcohols), will mark a significant advancement towards the development of green transfer hydrogenation strategies. Described herein is an unconventional catalyst-free transfer hydrogenation reaction of activated alkenes using isopropanol as an eco-friendly reductant and solvent. The reaction gives convenient synthetic access to a wide range of substituted malonic acid half oxyesters (SMAHOs) in moderate to good yields. Mechanistic investigations point towards an unprecedented hydrogen bond-assisted transfer hydrogenation process.more » « less
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Kattamuri, Padmanabha V.; Zhao, Jidong; Das, Tamal Kanti; Siitonen, Juha H.; Morgan, Nathan; Ess, Daniel H.; Kürti, László (, Journal of the American Chemical Society)
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