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Suppressed Migration and Enhanced Cisplatin Chemosensitivity in Human Cancer Cell Lines by Tuning the Molecular Mobility of Supramolecular Biomaterials.

Masahiro HakariyaYoshinori ArisakaHiroki MasudaTetsuya YodaTakanori IwataNobuhiko Yui
Published in: Macromolecular bioscience (2022)
Cancer cells recognize physical cues transmitted from the surrounding microenvironment, and accordingly alter the migration and chemosensitivity. Cell adhesive biomaterials with tunable physical properties can contribute to the understanding of cancer cell responses, and development of new cancer therapies. Previously, we reported that polyrotaxane-based surfaces with molecular mobility effectively modulate cellular functions via the yes-associated protein (YAP)-related signaling pathway. In the present study, we investigate the impact of molecular mobility on polyrotaxane surfaces on the migration and chemosensitivity of lung (A549), pancreatic (BxPC-3), and breast cancer (MDA-MB-231) cell lines and found that the cellular spreading of adherent A549 and BxPC-3 cells and nuclear YAP translocation were promoted on low-mobility surfaces, suggesting that cancer cells alter their subcellular YAP localization in response to molecular mobility. Furthermore, low-mobility surfaces suppressed cellular migration more than high-mobility surfaces. Additionally, low-mobility surfaces promoted the cisplatin chemosensitivity of each cancer cell line to a greater extent than high-mobility surfaces. These results suggest that the molecular mobility of polyrotaxane surfaces suppresses cellular migration and enhances chemosensitivity via the subcellular translocation of YAP in cancer cells. Biointerfaces based on polyrotaxanes could thus be a new platform for elucidating cancer cell migration and chemoresistance mechanisms. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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