AI Article Synopsis

  • Biomechanical changes, particularly collagen content and organization in tumors, significantly influence tumor progression and metastasis.
  • The collagen receptor DDR2 in cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) plays a crucial role in controlling tumor stiffness by reorganizing collagen fibers at the tumor-stromal boundary, which is linked to the development of lung metastases.
  • DDR2's activity in CAFs enhances mechanotransduction through integrin activation, facilitating a more permissive microenvironment for tumor cell invasion and metastasis.

Article Abstract

Biomechanical changes in the tumor microenvironment influence tumor progression and metastases. Collagen content and fiber organization within the tumor stroma are major contributors to biomechanical changes (e., tumor stiffness) and correlated with tumor aggressiveness and outcome. What signals and in what cells control collagen organization within the tumors, and how, is not fully understood. We show in mouse breast tumors that the action of the collagen receptor DDR2 in CAFs controls tumor stiffness by reorganizing collagen fibers specifically at the tumor-stromal boundary. These changes were associated with lung metastases. The action of DDR2 in mouse and human CAFs, and tumors in vivo, was found to influence mechanotransduction by controlling full collagen-binding integrin activation via Rap1-mediated Talin1 and Kindlin2 recruitment. The action of DDR2 in tumor CAFs is thus critical for remodeling collagen fibers at the tumor-stromal boundary to generate a physically permissive tumor microenvironment for tumor cell invasion and metastases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6555593PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.45508DOI Listing

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