Decoupling chemical and mechanical signaling in colorectal cancer cell migration

Maxwell G. Tetrick, Md Abul Bashar Emon, Umnia Doha, Marsophia Marcellus, Joseph Symanski, Valli Ramanathan, M. Taher A. Saif, Catherine J. Murphy

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Colorectal cancer metastasis is governed by a variety of chemical and mechanical signaling that are largely influenced by cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) in the tumor microenvironment. Here, we deconvolute the chemical from mechanical signaling in the case of the colon cancer cell line HCT-116 and CAFs. We examined three chemoattractants (CXCL12, TGF-β, and activin A) which allegedly are secreted by CAFs and induce HCT-116 cell migration. None of the chemoattractants tested resulted in enhanced migration of HCT-116 in a 2D transwell assay, at low cell density. Similarly, CAF-conditioned media also did not lead to enhanced HCT-116 migration, while CAFs co-cultured in the transwell assay did lead to increased HCT-116 migration. This result suggests that either high cell densities are required for chemotaxis, and/or a reciprocal two-way signaling network between CAFs and HCT-116 is necessary to induce chemotaxis. Surprisingly, we find that HCT-116 cells exhibit enhanced migration along the axis of mechanical stress in a 3D collagen matrix, at very high cell densities. This migration is independent of whether the strain is induced mechanically or by CAFs. By comparing purely mechanical and purely chemical migration to a 3D co-culture of CAFs and HCT-116 containing both chemical and mechanical cues, it is concluded that HCT-116 migration is dominated by mechanical signaling, while chemical cues are less influential.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number4952
JournalScientific reports
Volume15
Issue number1
Early online dateFeb 10 2025
DOIs
StateE-pub ahead of print - Feb 10 2025

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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