Breast cancer stem cells: mechanobiology reveals highly invasive cancer cell subpopulations.
Martha B Alvarez-ElizondoDaphne WeihsPublished in: Cellular and molecular life sciences : CMLS (2022)
Cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) are a typically small subpopulation of highly tumorigenic cells that can self-renew, differentiate, drive tumor progression, and may mediate drug resistance and metastasis. Metastasis driving CSCs are expected to be highly invasive. To determine the relative invasiveness of CSCs, we isolate distinct subpopulations in the metastatic, MDA-MB-231 breast-cancer cell line, identified by the stem-cell markers aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) and CD44. We determine CSC-subpopulation invasiveness levels using our rapid (2 h) mechanobiology-based assay. Specifically, invasive cells forcefully push and indent the surface of physiological-stiffness synthetic gels to cell-scale depths, where the percentage of indenting cells and their attained depths have previously provided clinically relevant predictions of the metastatic risk in different cancer types. We observe that the small (3.2%) CD44 + ALDH + cell-subpopulation indents more and attains significantly deeper depths (65% indenting to 6 ± 0.3 µm) relative to CD44 + ALDH - , CD44 - ALDH - , CD44 - ALDH + cells, and the whole-sample control (with 18-44% indenting cells reaching average depths of 4.4-5 µm). The CD44 + ALDH + similarly demonstrates twofold higher migratory capacity in Boyden chambers. The higher invasiveness of CD44 + ALDH + cells reveals their likely role in facilitating disease progression, providing prognostic markers for increased risk of recurrence and metastasis.