Dynein‐Powered Cell Locomotion Guides Metastasis of Breast Cancer

Author:

Tagay Yerbol1,Kheirabadi Sina2,Ataie Zaman2,Singh Rakesh K.3,Prince Olivia4,Nguyen Ashley4,Zhovmer Alexander S.4,Ma Xuefei4,Sheikhi Amir25,Tsygankov Denis6,Tabdanov Erdem D.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology Penn State College of Medicine The Pennsylvania State University Hershey PA 17033 USA

2. Department of Chemical Engineering The Pennsylvania State University University Park PA 16802 USA

3. Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology Gynecology Oncology University of Rochester Medical Center Rochester NY 14642 USA

4. Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research U.S. Food and Drug Administration Silver Spring MD 20903 USA

5. Department of Biomedical Engineering The Pennsylvania State University University Park PA 16802 USA

6. Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University Atlanta GA 30332 USA

7. Penn State Cancer Institute Penn State College of Medicine The Pennsylvania State University Hershey PA 17033 USA

Abstract

AbstractThe principal cause of death in cancer patients is metastasis, which remains an unresolved problem. Conventionally, metastatic dissemination is linked to actomyosin‐driven cell locomotion. However, the locomotion of cancer cells often does not strictly line up with the measured actomyosin forces. Here, a complementary mechanism of metastatic locomotion powered by dynein‐generated forces is identified. These forces arise within a non‐stretchable microtubule network and drive persistent contact guidance of migrating cancer cells along the biomimetic collagen fibers. It is also shown that the dynein‐powered locomotion becomes indispensable during invasive 3D migration within a tissue‐like luminal network formed by spatially confining granular hydrogel scaffolds (GHS) made up of microscale hydrogel particles (microgels). These results indicate that the complementary motricity mediated by dynein is always necessary and, in certain instances, sufficient for disseminating metastatic breast cancer cells. These findings advance the fundamental understanding of cell locomotion mechanisms and expand the spectrum of clinical targets against metastasis.

Funder

Meghan Rose Bradley Foundation

National Science Foundation

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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