Fluid shear stress regulates the survival of circulating tumor cells via nuclear expansion

Author:

Xu Zichen1234,Li Keming123,Xin Ying123,Tang Kai123,Yang Mo2,Wang Guixue4,Tan Youhua123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Hong Kong Polytechnic University Shenzhen Research Institute 1 , Shenzhen 518000 , China

2. Research Institute for Smart Ageing, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University 2 , Hong Kong 999077 , China

3. The Hong Kong Polytechnic University 3 Department of Biomedical Engineering , , Hong Kong 999077 , China

4. State and Local Joint Engineering Laboratory for Vascular Implants, Bioengineering College of Chongqing University 4 Key Laboratory for Biorheological Science and Technology of Ministry of Education , , Chongqing 400030 , China

Abstract

ABSTRACT Distant metastasis mainly occurs through hematogenous dissemination, where suspended circulating tumor cells (CTCs) experience a considerable level of fluid shear stress. We recently reported that shear flow induced substantial apoptosis of CTCs, although a small subpopulation could still persist. However, how suspended tumor cells survive in shear flow remains poorly understood. This study finds that fluid shear stress eliminates the majority of suspended CTCs and increases nuclear size, whereas it has no effect on the viability of adherent tumor cells and decreases their nuclear size. Shear flow promotes histone acetylation in suspended tumor cells, the inhibition of which using one drug suppresses shear-induced nuclear expansion, suggesting that shear stress might increase nuclear size through histone acetylation. Suppressing histone acetylation-mediated nuclear expansion enhances shear-induced apoptosis of CTCs. These findings suggest that suspended tumor cells respond to shear stress through histone acetylation-mediated nuclear expansion, which protects CTCs from shear-induced destruction. Our study elucidates a unique mechanism underlying the mechanotransduction of suspended CTCs to shear flow, which might hold therapeutic promise for CTC eradication.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Commission

Hong Kong Research Grant Council

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Cell Biology

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