Different contractility modes control cell escape from multicellular spheroids and tumor explants

Author:

Blauth Eliane1ORCID,Grosser Steffen2ORCID,Sauer Frank1ORCID,Merkel Mario1ORCID,Kubitschke Hans1ORCID,Warmt Enrico1ORCID,Morawetz Erik W.1ORCID,Friedrich Philip1ORCID,Wolf Benjamin3ORCID,Briest Susanne3ORCID,Hiller Grit Gesine Ruth4ORCID,Horn Lars-Christian4ORCID,Aktas Bahriye3ORCID,Käs Josef A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Peter Debye Institute for Soft Matter Physics, Leipzig University 1 , Linnéstraße 5, 04103 Leipzig, Germany

2. Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia, The Barcelona Institute for Science and Technology 4 , Barcelona 08028, Spain

3. Department of Gynecology, Leipzig University Hospital 2 , 04103 Leipzig, Germany

4. Division of Breast, Urogenital and Perinatal Pathology, University Hospital Leipzig 3 , Leipzig, Germany

Abstract

Cells can adapt their active contractile properties to switch between dynamical migratory states and static homeostasis. Collective tissue surface tension, generated among others by the cortical contractility of single cells, can keep cell clusters compact, while a more bipolar, anisotropic contractility is predominantly used by mesenchymal cells to pull themselves into the extracellular matrix (ECM). Here, we investigate how these two contractility modes relate to cancer cell escape into the ECM. We compare multicellular spheroids from a panel of breast cancer cell lines with primary tumor explants from breast and cervical cancer patients by measuring matrix contraction and cellular spreading into ECM mimicking collagen matrices. Our results in spheroids suggest that tumor aggressiveness is associated with elevated contractile traction and reduced active tissue surface tension, allowing cancer cell escape. We show that it is not a binary switch but rather the interplay between these two contractility modes that is essential during this process. We provide further evidence in patient-derived tumor explants that these two contractility modes impact cancer cells' ability to leave cell clusters within a primary tumor. Our results indicate that cellular contractility is an essential factor during the formation of metastases and thus may be suitable as a prognostic criterion for the assessment of tumor aggressiveness.

Funder

European Research Council

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

AIP Publishing

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