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Cancer Research 69, 4167, May 15, 2009. Published Online First May 12, 2009;
doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-08-4859
© 2009 American Association for Cancer Research

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Cell, Tumor, and Stem Cell Biology

The Mechanical Rigidity of the Extracellular Matrix Regulates the Structure, Motility, and Proliferation of Glioma Cells

Theresa A. Ulrich1,2, Elena M. de Juan Pardo1 and Sanjay Kumar1,2

1 Department of Bioengineering, University of California, Berkeley and 2 University of California, San Francisco/University of California, Berkeley Joint Graduate Group in Bioengineering, Berkeley, California

Requests for reprints: Sanjay Kumar, Department of Bioengineering, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-1762. Phone: 510-643-0787; Fax: 510-642-5835; E-mail: skumar{at}berkeley.edu.

Key Words: glioblastoma multiforme • cytoskeleton • cell adhesion • myosin • tumor invasion • Rho GTPase • mechanotransduction

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a malignant astrocytoma of the central nervous system associated with a median survival time of 15 months, even with aggressive therapy. This rapid progression is due in part to diffuse infiltration of single tumor cells into the brain parenchyma, which is thought to involve aberrant interactions between tumor cells and the extracellular matrix (ECM). Here, we test the hypothesis that mechanical cues from the ECM contribute to key tumor cell properties relevant to invasion. We cultured a series of glioma cell lines (U373-MG, U87-MG, U251-MG, SNB19, C6) on fibronectin-coated polymeric ECM substrates of defined mechanical rigidity and investigated the role of ECM rigidity in regulating tumor cell structure, migration, and proliferation. On highly rigid ECMs, tumor cells spread extensively, form prominent stress fibers and mature focal adhesions, and migrate rapidly. As ECM rigidity is lowered to values comparable with normal brain tissue, tumor cells appear rounded and fail to productively migrate. Remarkably, cell proliferation is also strongly regulated by ECM rigidity, with cells dividing much more rapidly on rigid than on compliant ECMs. Pharmacologic inhibition of nonmuscle myosin II–based contractility blunts this rigidity-sensitivity and rescues cell motility on highly compliant substrates. Collectively, our results provide support for a novel model in which ECM rigidity provides a transformative, microenvironmental cue that acts through actomyosin contractility to regulate the invasive properties of GBM tumor cells. [Cancer Res 2009;69(10):4167–74]







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Copyright © 2009 by the American Association for Cancer Research.