Investigator

Jimpi Langthasa

Indian Institute Of Soil Science

JLJimpi Langthasa
Papers(1)
Rheological transitio…
Collaborators(3)
Prosenjit SenRamray BhatAnnapurna Vadaparty
Institutions(2)
Indian Institute Of S…Sri Shankara cancer h…

Papers

Rheological transition driven by matrix makes cancer spheroids resilient under confinement

Cancer metastasis through confining peritoneal microenvironments is mediated by spheroids: clusters of disseminated cells. Ovarian cancer spheroids are frequently cavitated; such blastuloid morphologies possess an outer ECM coat. We investigated the effects of these spheroidal morphological traits on their mechanical integrity. Atomic force microscopy showed blastuloids were elastic compared with their prefiguring lumenless moruloid counterparts. Moruloids flowed through microfluidic setups mimicking peritoneal confinement, exhibited asymmetric cell flows during entry, were frequently disintegrated, and showed an incomplete and slow shape recovery upon exit. In contrast, blastuloids exhibited size-uncorrelated transit kinetics, rapid and efficient shape recovery upon exit, symmetric cell flows, and lesser disintegration. Blastuloid ECM debridement phenocopied moruloid traits including lumen loss and greater disintegration. Multiscale computer simulations predicted that higher intercellular adhesion and dynamical lumen make blastuloids resilient. Blastuloids showed higher E-cadherin expression, and their ECM removal decreased membrane E-cadherin localization. E-cadherin knockdown also decreased lumen formation and increased spheroid disintegration. Thus, the spheroidal ECM drives its transition from a labile viscoplastic to a resilient elastic phenotype, facilitating their survival within spatially constrained peritoneal flows.

1Papers
3Collaborators
Cell Line, TumorTumor MicroenvironmentOvarian NeoplasmsNeoplasm MetastasisNeoplasmsHead and Neck Neoplasms