SPAK-dependent cotransporter activity mediates capillary adhesion and pressure during glioblastoma migration in confined spaces

Author:

Lee Sung Hoon12ORCID,Yousafzai Muhammad Sulaiman12,Mohler Kyle23,Yadav Vikrant12,Amiri Sorosh24,Szuszkiewicz Joanna12,Levchenko Andre12,Rinehart Jesse23,Murrell Michael152

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511

2. Systems Biology Institute, Yale University, West Haven, CT 06516

3. Department of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06510

4. Department of Mechanical Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520

5. Department of Physics, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511

Abstract

The invasive potential of glioblastoma cells is attributed to large changes in pressure and volume, driven by diverse elements, including the cytoskeleton and ion cotransporters.  However, how the cell actuates changes in pressure and volume in confinement, and how these changes contribute to invasive motion is unclear. Here, we inhibited SPAK activity, with known impacts on the cytoskeleton and cotransporter activity and explored its role on the migration of glioblastoma cells in confining microchannels to model invasive spread through brain tissue. First, we found that confinement altered cell shape, inducing a transition in morphology that resembled droplet interactions with a capillary vessel, from “wetting” (more adherent) at low confinement, to “nonwetting” (less adherent) at high confinement. This transition was marked by a change from negative to positive pressure by the cells to the confining walls, and an increase in migration speed. Second, we found that the SPAK pathway impacted the migration speed in different ways dependent upon the extent of wetting. For nonwetting cells, SPAK inhibition increased cell-surface tension and cotransporter activity. By contrast, for wetting cells, it also reduced myosin II and YAP phosphorylation. In both cases, membrane-to-cortex attachment is dramatically reduced. Thus, our results suggest that SPAK inhibition differentially coordinates cotransporter and cytoskeleton-induced forces, to impact glioblastoma migration depending on the extent of confinement.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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