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Tissue fluidification promotes a cGAS-STING cytosolic DNA response in invasive breast cancer.

Emanuela FrittoliAndrea PalamidessiFabio IannelliFederica ZanardiStefano VillaLeonardo BarzaghiHind AbdoValeria CancilaGalina V BeznoussenkoGiulia Della ChiaraMassimiliano PaganiChiara MalinvernoDipanjan BhattacharyaFederica PisatiWeimiao YuViviana GalimbertiGiuseppina BonizziEmanuele MartiniAlexander A MironovUbaldo GioiaFloriana AscioneQingsen LiKristina HavasSerena MagniZeno LavagninoFabrizio Andrea PennacchioPaolo MaiuriSilvia CaponiMaurizio MattarelliSabata MartinoFabrizio d'Adda di FagagnaChiara RossiMarco LucioniRichard TancrediPaolo PedrazzoliAndrea VecchioneCristiano PetriniFrancesco FerrariChiara LanzuoloGiovanni BertalotGuilherme NaderMarco FoianiMatthieu PielRoberto CerbinoFabio GiavazziClaudio TripodoGiorgio Scita
Published in: Nature materials (2022)
The process in which locally confined epithelial malignancies progressively evolve into invasive cancers is often promoted by unjamming, a phase transition from a solid-like to a liquid-like state, which occurs in various tissues. Whether this tissue-level mechanical transition impacts phenotypes during carcinoma progression remains unclear. Here we report that the large fluctuations in cell density that accompany unjamming result in repeated mechanical deformations of cells and nuclei. This triggers a cellular mechano-protective mechanism involving an increase in nuclear size and rigidity, heterochromatin redistribution and remodelling of the perinuclear actin architecture into actin rings. The chronic strains and stresses associated with unjamming together with the reduction of Lamin B1 levels eventually result in DNA damage and nuclear envelope ruptures, with the release of cytosolic DNA that activates a cGAS-STING (cyclic GMP-AMP synthase-signalling adaptor stimulator of interferon genes)-dependent cytosolic DNA response gene program. This mechanically driven transcriptional rewiring ultimately alters the cell state, with the emergence of malignant traits, including epithelial-to-mesenchymal plasticity phenotypes and chemoresistance in invasive breast carcinoma.
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