Cell volume expansion and local contractility drive collective invasion of the basement membrane in breast cancer.
Julie ChangAashrith SaraswathibhatlaZhaoqiang SongSushama VarmaColline SanchezNaomi Hassan Kahtan AlyafeiDhiraj IndanaRaleigh SlymanSucheta SrivastavaKatherine LiuMichael C BassikM Peter MarinkovichLouis HodgsonVivek B ShenoyRobert B WestOvijit ChaudhuriPublished in: Nature materials (2023)
Breast cancer becomes invasive when carcinoma cells invade through the basement membrane (BM)-a nanoporous layer of matrix that physically separates the primary tumour from the stroma. Single cells can invade through nanoporous three-dimensional matrices due to protease-mediated degradation or force-mediated widening of pores via invadopodial protrusions. However, how multiple cells collectively invade through the physiological BM, as they do during breast cancer progression, remains unclear. Here we developed a three-dimensional in vitro model of collective invasion of the BM during breast cancer. We show that cells utilize both proteases and forces-but not invadopodia-to breach the BM. Forces are generated from a combination of global cell volume expansion, which stretches the BM, and local contractile forces that act in the plane of the BM to breach it, allowing invasion. These results uncover a mechanism by which cells collectively interact to overcome a critical barrier to metastasis.