Rho activation drives luminal collapse and eversion in epithelial acini

Epithelial cells lining a gland and cells grown in a soft extracellular matrix polarize with apical proteins exposed to the lumen and basal proteins in contact with the extracellular matrix. Alterations to polarity, including an apical-out polarity, occur in human cancers. Although some aberrant pol...

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Published inBiophysical journal Vol. 122; no. 18; pp. 3630 - 3645
Main Authors Narayanan, Vani, Purkayastha, Purboja, Yu, Bo, Pendyala, Kavya, Chukkapalli, Sasanka, Cabe, Jolene I., Dickinson, Richard B., Conway, Daniel E., Lele, Tanmay P.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 19.09.2023
The Biophysical Society
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ISSN0006-3495
1542-0086
1542-0086
DOI10.1016/j.bpj.2023.01.005

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Summary:Epithelial cells lining a gland and cells grown in a soft extracellular matrix polarize with apical proteins exposed to the lumen and basal proteins in contact with the extracellular matrix. Alterations to polarity, including an apical-out polarity, occur in human cancers. Although some aberrant polarity states may result from altered protein trafficking, recent observations of an extraordinary tissue-level inside-out unfolding suggest an alternative pathway for altered polarity. Because mechanical alterations are common in human cancer, including an upregulation of RhoA-mediated actomyosin tension in acinar epithelia, we explored whether perturbing mechanical homeostasis could cause apical-out eversion. Acinar eversion was robustly induced by direct activation of RhoA in normal and tumor epithelial acini, or indirect activation of RhoA through blockage of β1-integrins, disruption of the LINC complex, oncogenic Ras activation, or Rac1 inhibition. Furthermore, laser ablation of a portion of the untreated acinus was sufficient to induce eversion. Analyses of acini revealed high curvature and low phosphorylated myosin in the apical cell surfaces relative to the basal surfaces. A vertex-based mathematical model that balances tension at cell-cell interfaces revealed a fivefold greater basal cell surface tension relative to the apical cell surface tension. The model suggests that the difference in surface energy between the apical and basal surfaces is the driving force for acinar eversion. Our findings raise the possibility that a loss of mechanical homeostasis may cause apical-out polarity states in human cancers.
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ISSN:0006-3495
1542-0086
1542-0086
DOI:10.1016/j.bpj.2023.01.005