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Cell shape, and not 2D migration, predicts extracellular matrix-driven 3D cell invasion in breast cancer

Metastasis, the leading cause of death in cancer patients, requires the invasion of tumor cells through the stroma in response to migratory cues, in part provided by the extracellular matrix (ECM). Recent advances in proteomics have led to the identification of hundreds of ECM proteins, which are mo...

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Autores principales: Baskaran, Janani P., Weldy, Anna, Guarin, Justinne, Munoz, Gabrielle, Shpilker, Polina H., Kotlik, Michael, Subbiah, Nandita, Wishart, Andrew, Peng, Yifan, Miller, Miles A., Cowen, Lenore, Oudin, Madeleine J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AIP Publishing LLC 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7202897/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32455252
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5143779
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author Baskaran, Janani P.
Weldy, Anna
Guarin, Justinne
Munoz, Gabrielle
Shpilker, Polina H.
Kotlik, Michael
Subbiah, Nandita
Wishart, Andrew
Peng, Yifan
Miller, Miles A.
Cowen, Lenore
Oudin, Madeleine J.
author_facet Baskaran, Janani P.
Weldy, Anna
Guarin, Justinne
Munoz, Gabrielle
Shpilker, Polina H.
Kotlik, Michael
Subbiah, Nandita
Wishart, Andrew
Peng, Yifan
Miller, Miles A.
Cowen, Lenore
Oudin, Madeleine J.
author_sort Baskaran, Janani P.
collection PubMed
description Metastasis, the leading cause of death in cancer patients, requires the invasion of tumor cells through the stroma in response to migratory cues, in part provided by the extracellular matrix (ECM). Recent advances in proteomics have led to the identification of hundreds of ECM proteins, which are more abundant in tumors relative to healthy tissue. Our goal was to develop a pipeline to easily predict which ECM proteins are more likely to have an effect on cancer invasion and metastasis. We evaluated the effect of four ECM proteins upregulated in breast tumor tissue in multiple human breast cancer cell lines in three assays. There was no linear relationship between cell adhesion to ECM proteins and ECM-driven 2D cell migration speed, persistence, or 3D invasion. We then used classifiers and partial-least squares regression analysis to identify which metrics best predicted ECM-driven 2D migration and 3D invasion responses. We find that ECM-driven 2D cell migration speed or persistence did not predict 3D invasion in response to the same cue. However, cell adhesion, and in particular cell elongation and shape irregularity, accurately predicted the magnitude of ECM-driven 2D migration and 3D invasion. Our models successfully predicted the effect of novel ECM proteins in a cell-line specific manner. Overall, our studies identify the cell morphological features that determine 3D invasion responses to individual ECM proteins. This platform will help provide insight into the functional role of ECM proteins abundant in tumor tissue and help prioritize strategies for targeting tumor-ECM interactions to treat metastasis.
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spelling pubmed-72028972020-05-22 Cell shape, and not 2D migration, predicts extracellular matrix-driven 3D cell invasion in breast cancer Baskaran, Janani P. Weldy, Anna Guarin, Justinne Munoz, Gabrielle Shpilker, Polina H. Kotlik, Michael Subbiah, Nandita Wishart, Andrew Peng, Yifan Miller, Miles A. Cowen, Lenore Oudin, Madeleine J. APL Bioeng Articles Metastasis, the leading cause of death in cancer patients, requires the invasion of tumor cells through the stroma in response to migratory cues, in part provided by the extracellular matrix (ECM). Recent advances in proteomics have led to the identification of hundreds of ECM proteins, which are more abundant in tumors relative to healthy tissue. Our goal was to develop a pipeline to easily predict which ECM proteins are more likely to have an effect on cancer invasion and metastasis. We evaluated the effect of four ECM proteins upregulated in breast tumor tissue in multiple human breast cancer cell lines in three assays. There was no linear relationship between cell adhesion to ECM proteins and ECM-driven 2D cell migration speed, persistence, or 3D invasion. We then used classifiers and partial-least squares regression analysis to identify which metrics best predicted ECM-driven 2D migration and 3D invasion responses. We find that ECM-driven 2D cell migration speed or persistence did not predict 3D invasion in response to the same cue. However, cell adhesion, and in particular cell elongation and shape irregularity, accurately predicted the magnitude of ECM-driven 2D migration and 3D invasion. Our models successfully predicted the effect of novel ECM proteins in a cell-line specific manner. Overall, our studies identify the cell morphological features that determine 3D invasion responses to individual ECM proteins. This platform will help provide insight into the functional role of ECM proteins abundant in tumor tissue and help prioritize strategies for targeting tumor-ECM interactions to treat metastasis. AIP Publishing LLC 2020-05-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7202897/ /pubmed/32455252 http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5143779 Text en © Author(s). 2473-2877/2020/4(2)/026105/16 All article content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Baskaran, Janani P.
Weldy, Anna
Guarin, Justinne
Munoz, Gabrielle
Shpilker, Polina H.
Kotlik, Michael
Subbiah, Nandita
Wishart, Andrew
Peng, Yifan
Miller, Miles A.
Cowen, Lenore
Oudin, Madeleine J.
Cell shape, and not 2D migration, predicts extracellular matrix-driven 3D cell invasion in breast cancer
title Cell shape, and not 2D migration, predicts extracellular matrix-driven 3D cell invasion in breast cancer
title_full Cell shape, and not 2D migration, predicts extracellular matrix-driven 3D cell invasion in breast cancer
title_fullStr Cell shape, and not 2D migration, predicts extracellular matrix-driven 3D cell invasion in breast cancer
title_full_unstemmed Cell shape, and not 2D migration, predicts extracellular matrix-driven 3D cell invasion in breast cancer
title_short Cell shape, and not 2D migration, predicts extracellular matrix-driven 3D cell invasion in breast cancer
title_sort cell shape, and not 2d migration, predicts extracellular matrix-driven 3d cell invasion in breast cancer
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7202897/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32455252
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5143779
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