Integrin-mediated traction force enhances paxillin molecular associations and adhesion dynamics that increase the invasiveness of tumor cells into a three-dimensional extracellular matrix

Armen H. Mekhdjian(Stanford University), FuiBoon Kai(University of California, San Francisco), Matthew G. Rubashkin(University of California, San Francisco), L. Prahl(University of Minnesota), Laralynne Przybyla(University of California, San Francisco), Alexandra McGregor(Cornell University), Emily Bell(Cornell University), J. Matthew Barnes(University of California, San Francisco), Christopher C. DuFort(University of California, San Francisco), Guanqing Ou(University of California, San Francisco), Alice C. Chang(Stanford University), Luke Cassereau(University of California, San Francisco), Steven Tan(Stanford University), Michael W. Pickup(University of California, San Francisco), Jonathan N. Lakins(University of California, San Francisco), Xin Ye(Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research), Michael W. Davidson(Florida State University), Jan Lammerding(Cornell University), David J. Odde(University of Minnesota), Alexander R. Dunn(Stanford University), Valerie M. Weaver(University of California, San Francisco)
Molecular Biology of the Cell
April 6, 2017
Cited by 140Open Access
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Abstract

Metastasis requires tumor cells to navigate through a stiff stroma and squeeze through confined microenvironments. Whether tumors exploit unique biophysical properties to metastasize remains unclear. Data show that invading mammary tumor cells, when cultured in a stiffened three-dimensional extracellular matrix that recapitulates the primary tumor stroma, adopt a basal-like phenotype. Metastatic tumor cells and basal-like tumor cells exert higher integrin-mediated traction forces at the bulk and molecular levels, consistent with a motor-clutch model in which motors and clutches are both increased. Basal-like nonmalignant mammary epithelial cells also display an altered integrin adhesion molecular organization at the nanoscale and recruit a suite of paxillin-associated proteins implicated in invasion and metastasis. Phosphorylation of paxillin by Src family kinases, which regulates adhesion turnover, is similarly enhanced in the metastatic and basal-like tumor cells, fostered by a stiff matrix, and critical for tumor cell invasion in our assays. Bioinformatics reveals an unappreciated relationship between Src kinases, paxillin, and survival of breast cancer patients. Thus adoption of the basal-like adhesion phenotype may favor the recruitment of molecules that facilitate tumor metastasis to integrin-based adhesions. Analysis of the physical properties of tumor cells and integrin adhesion composition in biopsies may be predictive of patient outcome.


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