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Mitochondrial fission links ECM mechanotransduction to metabolic redox homeostasis and metastatic chemotherapy resistance.

Patrizia RomaniNunzia NirchioMattia ArboitVito BarbieriAnna TosiFederica MichielinSoichi ShibuyaThomas BenoistDanchen WuCharles Colin Thomas HindmarchMonica GiomoAnna UrciuoloFlavia GiamoganteAntonella RoveriProbir ChakravartyMarco MontagnerTito CaliNicola ElvassoreStephen L ArcherPaolo de CoppiAntonio RosatoGraziano MartelloSirio Dupont
Published in: Nature cell biology (2022)
Metastatic breast cancer cells disseminate to organs with a soft microenvironment. Whether and how the mechanical properties of the local tissue influence their response to treatment remains unclear. Here we found that a soft extracellular matrix empowers redox homeostasis. Cells cultured on a soft extracellular matrix display increased peri-mitochondrial F-actin, promoted by Spire1C and Arp2/3 nucleation factors, and increased DRP1- and MIEF1/2-dependent mitochondrial fission. Changes in mitochondrial dynamics lead to increased production of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species and activate the NRF2 antioxidant transcriptional response, including increased cystine uptake and glutathione metabolism. This retrograde response endows cells with resistance to oxidative stress and reactive oxygen species-dependent chemotherapy drugs. This is relevant in a mouse model of metastatic breast cancer cells dormant in the lung soft tissue, where inhibition of DRP1 and NRF2 restored cisplatin sensitivity and prevented disseminated cancer-cell awakening. We propose that targeting this mitochondrial dynamics- and redox-based mechanotransduction pathway could open avenues to prevent metastatic relapse.
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