Abstract

In epithelia, normal cells recognize and extrude out newly emerged transformed cells by competition. This process is the most fundamental epithelial defence against cancer, whose occasional failure promotes oncogenesis. However, little is known about what factors determine the success or failure of this defence. Here we report that mechanical stiffening of extracellular matrix attenuates the epithelial defence against HRasV12-transformed cells. Using photoconversion labelling, protein tracking, and loss-of-function mutations, we attribute this attenuation to stiffening-induced perinuclear sequestration of a cytoskeletal protein, filamin. On soft matrix mimicking healthy epithelium, filamin exists as a dynamically single population, which moves to the normal cell-transformed cell interface to initiate the extrusion of transformed cells. However, on stiff matrix mimicking fibrotic epithelium, filamin redistributes into two dynamically distinct populations, including a new perinuclear pool that cannot move to the cell-cell interface. A matrix stiffness-dependent differential between filamin-Cdc42 and filamin-perinuclear cytoskeleton interaction controls this distinctive filamin localization and hence, determines the success or failure of epithelial defence on soft versus stiff matrix. Together, our study reveals how pathological matrix stiffening leads to a failed epithelial defence at the initial stage of oncogenesis.

Highlights

  • In epithelia, normal cells recognize and extrude out newly emerged transformed cells by competition

  • One would presume that epithelial defence against cancer (EDAC) might respond to the mechanical properties of tissue microenvironment, including the extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffness, and this parameter could be a critical factor in determining the success or failure of EDAC

  • We looked for the molecular mechanism by which stiff ECM inhibited EDAC-induced cell extrusion

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Summary

Introduction

Normal cells recognize and extrude out newly emerged transformed cells by competition This process is the most fundamental epithelial defence against cancer, whose occasional failure promotes oncogenesis. Any newly emerged transformed cell gets actively extruded out of the tissue by neighbouring normal cells[2,3,5,6,7,8] This process is the fundamental immune systemindependent epithelial defence against cancer (EDAC)[1,2,4,9,10,11,12,13] and belongs to a larger class of tissue quality-control processes, collectively known as cell competition[1,3]. We further elucidate the molecular mechanism underlying it, demonstrating that matrix stiffnessdependent intracellular localization of filamin is key to the regulation of EDAC

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