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Multimodal mechano-microscopy reveals mechanical phenotypes of breast cancer spheroids in three dimensions

Authors :
Alireza Mowla
Matt S. Hepburn
Jiayue Li
Danielle Vahala
Sebastian E. Amos
Liisa M. Hirvonen
Rowan W. Sanderson
Philip Wijesinghe
Samuel Maher
Yu Suk Choi
Brendan F. Kennedy
Source :
APL Bioengineering, Vol 8, Iss 3, Pp 036113-036113-14 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
AIP Publishing LLC, 2024.

Abstract

Cancer cell invasion relies on an equilibrium between cell deformability and the biophysical constraints imposed by the extracellular matrix (ECM). However, there is little consensus on the nature of the local biomechanical alterations in cancer cell dissemination in the context of three-dimensional (3D) tumor microenvironments (TMEs). While the shortcomings of two-dimensional (2D) models in replicating in situ cell behavior are well known, 3D TME models remain underutilized because contemporary mechanical quantification tools are limited to surface measurements. Here, we overcome this major challenge by quantifying local mechanics of cancer cell spheroids in 3D TMEs. We achieve this using multimodal mechano-microscopy, integrating optical coherence microscopy-based elasticity imaging with confocal fluorescence microscopy. We observe that non-metastatic cancer spheroids show no invasion while showing increased peripheral cell elasticity in both stiff and soft environments. Metastatic cancer spheroids, however, show ECM-mediated softening in a stiff microenvironment and, in a soft environment, initiate cell invasion with peripheral softening associated with early metastatic dissemination. This exemplar of live-cell 3D mechanotyping supports that invasion increases cell deformability in a 3D context, illustrating the power of multimodal mechano-microscopy for quantitative mechanobiology in situ.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
24732877
Volume :
8
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
APL Bioengineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9a7ac1d365d44208b6c5c30ae1a8512b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0213077