Abstract
Most osteosarcoma (OS) cases exhibit poor differentiation at the histopathological level. Disruption of the normal osteogenic differentiation process results in the unregulated proliferation of precursor cells, which is a critical factor in the development of OS. Differentiation therapy aims to slow disease progression by restoring the osteogenic differentiation process of OS cells and is considered a new approach to treating OS. However, there are currently few studies on the mechanism of differentiation of OS, which puts the development of differentiation therapeutic drugs into a bottleneck. Substrate stiffness can regulate differentiation in mesenchymal stem cells. Evidence supports that mesenchymal stem cells and osteoblast precursors are the origin of OS. In this study, we simulated different stiffnesses in vitro to investigate the mechanism of substrate stiffness affecting differentiation of OS. We demonstrate that Piezo type mechanosensitive ion channel component 1(PIEZO1) plays a critical regulatory role in sensing substrate stiffness in osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation of OS. When OS cells are cultured on the stiff substrate, integrin subunit beta 1 (ITGB1) increases and cooperates with PIEZO1 to promote Yes-Associated Protein (YAP) entering the nucleus. The YAP enters the nucleus and may inhibit EZH2, thereby inhibiting H3K27me3 and increasing RUNX2 expression, and cells differentiate toward osteogenesis. Our results provide new insights for research on differentiation treatment of OS and are expected to help identify new targets for future drug design.
Published Version
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