Matrix stiffening promotes a tumor vasculature phenotype

Author:

Bordeleau Francois,Mason Brooke N.,Lollis Emmanuel Macklin,Mazzola Michael,Zanotelli Matthew R.,Somasegar Sahana,Califano Joseph P.,Montague Christine,LaValley Danielle J.,Huynh John,Mencia-Trinchant Nuria,Negrón Abril Yashira L.,Hassane Duane C.,Bonassar Lawrence J.,Butcher Jonathan T.,Weiss Robert S.,Reinhart-King Cynthia A.

Abstract

Tumor microvasculature tends to be malformed, more permeable, and more tortuous than vessels in healthy tissue, effects that have been largely attributed to up-regulated VEGF expression. However, tumor tissue tends to stiffen during solid tumor progression, and tissue stiffness is known to alter cell behaviors including proliferation, migration, and cell–cell adhesion, which are all requisite for angiogenesis. Using in vitro, in vivo, and ex ovo models, we investigated the effects of matrix stiffness on vessel growth and integrity during angiogenesis. Our data indicate that angiogenic outgrowth, invasion, and neovessel branching increase with matrix cross-linking. These effects are caused by increased matrix stiffness independent of matrix density, because increased matrix density results in decreased angiogenesis. Notably, matrix stiffness up-regulates matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) activity, and inhibiting MMPs significantly reduces angiogenic outgrowth in stiffer cross-linked gels. To investigate the functional significance of altered endothelial cell behavior in response to matrix stiffness, we measured endothelial cell barrier function on substrates mimicking the stiffness of healthy and tumor tissue. Our data indicate that barrier function is impaired and the localization of vascular endothelial cadherin is altered as function of matrix stiffness. These results demonstrate that matrix stiffness, separately from matrix density, can alter vascular growth and integrity, mimicking the changes that exist in tumor vasculature. These data suggest that therapeutically targeting tumor stiffness or the endothelial cell response to tumor stiffening may help restore vessel structure, minimize metastasis, and aid in drug delivery.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

HHS | NIH | National Cancer Institute

NSF | ENG | Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental, and Transport Systems

NSF | ENG | Division of Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation

HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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