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Shear Stress Drives the Cleavage Activation of Protease‐Activated Receptor 2 by PRSS3/Mesotrypsin to Promote Invasion and Metastasis of Circulating Lung Cancer Cells

Muya Zhou, Koukou Li, Kathy Qian Luo

2023Advanced Science18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract When circulating tumor cells (CTCs) travel in circulation, they can be killed by detachment‐induced anoikis and fluidic shear stress (SS)‐mediated apoptosis. Circulatory treatment, which can make CTCs detached but also generate SS, can increase metastasis of cancer cells. To identify SS‐specific mechanosensors without detachment impacts, a microfluidic circulatory system is used to generate arteriosus SS and compare transcriptome profiles of circulating lung cancer cells with suspended cells. Half of the cancer cells can survive SS damage and show higher invasion ability. Mesotrypsin (PRSS3), protease‐activated receptor 2 (PAR2), and the subunit of activating protein 1, Fos‐related antigen 1 (FOSL1), are upregulated by SS, and their high expression is responsible for promoting invasion and metastasis. SS triggers PRSS3 to cleave the N‐terminal inhibitory domain of PAR2 within 2 h. As a G protein‐coupled receptor, PAR2 further activates the G α i protein to turn on the Src‐ERK/p38/JNK‐FRA1/cJUN axis to promote the expression of epithelial–mesenchymal transition markers, and also PRSS3, which facilitates metastasis. Enriched PRSS3, PAR2, and FOSL1 in human tumor samples and their correlations with worse outcomes reveal their clinical significance. PAR2 may serve as an SS‐specific mechanosensor cleavable by PRSS3 in circulation, which provides new insights for targeting metastasis‐initiating CTCs.

Topics & Concepts

Circulating tumor cellMetastasisCancer researchCancer cellDownregulation and upregulationCell biologyEpithelial–mesenchymal transitionBiologyCancerChemistryBiochemistryGeneticsGeneCancer Cells and MetastasisCellular Mechanics and InteractionsPhagocytosis and Immune Regulation