Abstract

Abstract The stiffness of the extracellular matrix (ECM) drives mechanosignaling that regulates tissue development and malignancy. We previously showed that a stiff ECM disrupts tissue organization and enhances malignant progression by inducing cell invasion and migration. However, the specific transcriptional and molecular events in which mechanotransduction directs these phenotypes are not well understood. To clarify this process, we used a combination of genome-scale approaches to monitor changes in gene expression and protein abundance as a function of acinar morphogenesis and tissue homeostasis in three dimensional extracellular matrix hydrogels with tunable stiffness. Elevated ECM stiffness perturbed tissue homeostasis and reverted the transcriptional phenotype of differentiated mammary acini to resemble that observed in rapidly proliferating nonpolarized mammary cell aggregates. These findings suggest that tissue tension induces cellular changes that directly reflect higher-order tissue organizational states. We found that these changes involve the spatial rearrangement of peripheral chromatin, and that the expression levels of multiple histone deacetylases increase in organized tissues concurrently with elevated nuclear heterochromatin content, an effect that is abrogated in rigid ECM conditions. We support these observations by mapping mechanoresponsive peripheral heterochromatin elements via ChIPseq, enabling us to directly identify dynamic regions containing genes whose transcriptional activity is responsive to mechanical cues. Finally, using a combination of genomic, imaging, and molecular biology techniques we demonstrated that ECM compliance and tissue organization significantly influences global RNA abundance. Notably, this model presents formidable conceptual and practical challenges for the interpretation of genomic data. Collectively, this work indicates that tissue organization is critically dependent on the cellular mechanical environment, which qualitatively and quantitatively shapes the epigenetic and transcriptional landscape by mechanisms that have not yet been elucidated. Note: This abstract was not presented at the conference. Citation Format: Russell Bainer, Yoshihiro Yui, Shannon Mumenthaler, Parag Mallick, Lin Liu, Hua-Jun Wu, Ondrej Podlaha, Franziska Michor, Jan Liphardt, Jonathan Licht, Valerie Weaver. Extracellular stiffness cues drive spatial reorganization of the genome to globally constrain RNA abundance. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference on Computational and Systems Biology of Cancer; Feb 8-11 2015; San Francisco, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2015;75(22 Suppl 2):Abstract nr PR09.

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