During breast cancer progression, there is typically increased collagen deposition resulting in elevated extracellular matrix rigidity. This results in changes to cell-matrix adhesion and cell migration, impacting processes such as the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and metastasis. We aim to investigate the roles of cell-matrix adhesion and cell migration on breast tumor growth and progression by studying the impacts of different types of extracellular matrices and their rigidities. We embedded MCF7 spheroids within three-dimensional (3D) collagen matrices and agarose matrices. MCF7 cells adhere to collagen but not agarose. Contrasting the results between these two matrices allows us to infer the role of cell-matrix adhesion. We found that MCF7 spheroids exhibited the fastest growth rate when embedded in a collagen matrix with a rigidity of 5.1 kPa (0.5 mg/mL collagen), whereas, for the agarose matrix, the rigidity for the fastest growth rate is 15 kPa (1.0% agarose) instead. This discrepancy is attributable to the presence of cell adhesion molecules in the collagen matrix, which initiates collagen matrix remodeling and facilitates cell migration from the tumor through the EMT. As breast tumors do not adhere to agarose matrices, it is suitable to simulate the cell-cell interactions during the early stage of breast tumor growth. We conducted further analysis to characterize the stresses exerted by the expanding spheroid on the agarose matrix. We identified two distinct MCF7 cell populations, namely, those that are non-dividing and those that are dividing, which exerted low and high expansion stresses on the agarose matrix, respectively. We confirmed this using Western blot which showed the upregulation of proliferating cell nuclear antigen, a proliferation marker, in spheroids grown in the 1.0% agarose (≈13 kPa). By treating the embedded MCF7 spheroids with an inhibitor or activator of myosin contractility, we showed that the optimum spheroids' growth can be increased or decreased, respectively. This finding suggests that tumor growth in the early stage, where cell-cell interaction is more prominent, is determined by actomyosin tension, which alters cell rounding pressure during cell division. However, when breast tumors begin generating collagen into the surrounding matrix, collagen remodeling triggers EMT to promote cell migration and invasion, ultimately leading to metastasis.
Biochemical signaling and mechano-transduction are both critical in regulating stem cell fate. How crosstalk between mechanical and biochemical cues influences embryonic development, however, is not extensively investigated. Using a comparative study of focal adhesion constituents between mouse embryonic stem cell (mESC) and their differentiated counterparts, we find while zyxin is lowly expressed in mESCs, its levels increase dramatically during early differentiation. Interestingly, overexpression of zyxin in mESCs suppresses Oct4 and Nanog. Using an integrative biochemical and biophysical approach, we demonstrate involvement of zyxin in regulating pluripotency through actin stress fibres and focal adhesions which are known to modulate cellular traction stress and facilitate substrate rigidity-sensing. YAP signaling is identified as an important biochemical effector of zyxin-induced mechanotransduction. These results provide insights into the role of zyxin in the integration of mechanical and biochemical cues for the regulation of embryonic stem cell fate.
Focal adhesions (FAs) are specialized structures that enable cells to sense their extracellular matrix rigidity and transmit these signals to the interior of the cells, bringing about actin cytoskeleton reorganization, FA maturation, and cell migration. It is known that cells migrate towards regions of higher substrate rigidity, a phenomenon known as durotaxis. However, the underlying molecular mechanism of durotaxis and how different proteins in the FA are involved remain unclear. Zyxin is a component of the FA that has been implicated in connecting the actin cytoskeleton to the FA. We have found that knocking down zyxin impaired NIH3T3 fibroblast's ability to sense and respond to changes in extracellular matrix in terms of their FA sizes, cell traction stress magnitudes and F-actin organization. Cell migration speed of zyxin knockdown fibroblasts was also independent of the underlying substrate rigidity, unlike wild type fibroblasts which migrated fastest at an intermediate substrate rigidity of 14 kPa. Wild type fibroblasts exhibited durotaxis by migrating toward regions of increasing substrate rigidity on polyacrylamide gels with substrate rigidity gradient, while zyxin knockdown fibroblasts did not exhibit durotaxis. Therefore, we propose zyxin as an essential protein that is required for rigidity sensing and durotaxis through modulating FA sizes, cell traction stress and F-actin organization.