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Oncogenic <i>RAS</i> instructs morphological transformation of human epithelia via differential tissue mechanics

Agata Nyga, José J. Muñoz, Suze Dercksen, Giulia Fornabaio, Marina Uroz, Xavier Trepat, Buzz Baum, Helen K. Matthews, Vito Conte

2021Science Advances37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

in confined epithelial monolayers on soft substrates drives a morphological transformation of a 2D monolayer into a compact 3D cell aggregate. This transformation was initiated by the loss of monolayer integrity and formation of two distinct cell layers with differential cell-cell junctions, cell-substrate adhesion, and tensional states. Computational modeling revealed how adhesion and active peripheral tension induces inherent mechanical instability in the system, which drives the 2D-to-3D morphological transformation. Consistent with this, removal of epithelial tension through the inhibition of actomyosin contractility halted the process. These findings reveal the mechanisms by which oncogene activation within an epithelium can induce mechanical instability to drive morphological tissue transformation.

Topics & Concepts

Cell biologyTransformation (genetics)EpitheliumMalignant transformationBiologyGeneCancer researchGeneticsCellular Mechanics and InteractionsMicrotubule and mitosis dynamicsCancer Cells and Metastasis