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Regulation of cellular contractile force, shape and migration of fibroblasts by oncogenes and Histone deacetylase 6
University of Sheffield, UK.
University of Sheffield, UK.
University of Sheffield, UK.
Veneto Institute of Oncology IOV-IRCCS, Italy.
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2023 (English)In: Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences, E-ISSN 2296-889X, Vol. 10, article id 1197814Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The capacity of cells to adhere to, exert forces upon and migrate through their surrounding environment governs tissue regeneration and cancer metastasis. The role of the physical contractile forces that cells exert in this process, and the underlying molecular mechanisms are not fully understood. We, therefore, aimed to clarify if the extracellular forces that cells exert on their environment and/or the intracellular forces that deform the cell nucleus, and the link between these forces, are defective in transformed and invasive fibroblasts, and to indicate the underlying molecular mechanism of control. Confocal, Epifluorescence and Traction force microscopy, followed by computational analysis, showed an increased maximum contractile force that cells apply on their environment and a decreased intracellular force on the cell nucleus in the invasive fibroblasts, as compared to normal control cells. Loss of HDAC6 activity by tubacin-treatment and siRNA-mediated HDAC6 knockdown also reversed the reduced size and more circular shape and defective migration of the transformed and invasive cells to normal. However, only tubacin-mediated, and not siRNA knockdown reversed the increased force of the invasive cells on their surrounding environment to normal, with no effects on nuclear forces. We observed that the forces on the environment and the nucleus were weakly positively correlated, with the exception of HDAC6 siRNA-treated cells, in which the correlation was weakly negative. The transformed and invasive fibroblasts showed an increased number and smaller cell-matrix adhesions than control, and neither tubacin-treatment, nor HDAC6 knockdown reversed this phenotype to normal, but instead increased it further. This highlights the possibility that the control of contractile force requires separate functions of HDAC6, than the control of cell adhesions, spreading and shape. These data are consistent with the possibility that defective force-transduction from the extracellular environment to the nucleus contributes to metastasis, via a mechanism that depends upon HDAC6. To our knowledge, our findings present the first correlation between the cellular forces that deforms the surrounding environment and the nucleus in fibroblasts, and it expands our understanding of how cells generate contractile forces that contribute to cell invasion and metastasis. Copyright © 2023 López-Guajardo, Zafar, Al Hennawi, Rossi, Alrwaili, Medcalf, Dunning, Nordgren, Pettersson, Estabrook, Hawkins and Gad.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Frontiers Media SA , 2023. Vol. 10, article id 1197814
Keywords [en]
cell adhesion, cellular contractile forces, fibroblasts, Histone deacetylase 6, intracellular forces on nucleus, metastasis, oncogenes, Traction force microscopy
National Category
Cell and Molecular Biology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:ri:diva-66143DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2023.1197814Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85167455683OAI: oai:DiVA.org:ri-66143DiVA, id: diva2:1798868
Note

We thank the Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT),the Portuguese Government (PEst-OE/QUI/UI0674/2013) andthe Agência Regional para o Desenvolvimento da InvestigaçaõTecnologia e Inovação (ARDITI), M1420-01-0145-FEDER000005, Portugal, and we are grateful to the University ofSheffield for financial support. 

Available from: 2023-09-20 Created: 2023-09-20 Last updated: 2023-09-20Bibliographically approved

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