| Literature DB >> 33238151 |
Valentin Gensbittel1, Martin Kräter2, Sébastien Harlepp1, Ignacio Busnelli1, Jochen Guck3, Jacky G Goetz4.
Abstract
The most dangerous aspect of cancer lies in metastatic progression. Tumor cells will successfully form life-threatening metastases when they undergo sequential steps along a journey from the primary tumor to distant organs. From a biomechanics standpoint, growth, invasion, intravasation, circulation, arrest/adhesion, and extravasation of tumor cells demand particular cell-mechanical properties in order to survive and complete the metastatic cascade. With metastatic cells usually being softer than their non-malignant counterparts, high deformability for both the cell and its nucleus is thought to offer a significant advantage for metastatic potential. However, it is still unclear whether there is a finely tuned but fixed mechanical state that accommodates all mechanical features required for survival throughout the cascade or whether tumor cells need to dynamically refine their properties and intracellular components at each new step encountered. Here, we review the various mechanical requirements successful cancer cells might need to fulfill along their journey and speculate on the possibility that they dynamically adapt their properties accordingly. The mechanical signature of a successful cancer cell might actually be its ability to adapt to the successive microenvironmental constraints along the different steps of the journey.Entities:
Keywords: deformability; mechanical phenotype; mechanical stress; mechanosensing; metastasis; stiffness; tumor cell mechanics
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33238151 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2020.10.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270