Department of Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC, 27708, USA.
Duke Cancer Institute, Duke University, Durham, NC, 27708, USA.
Biomech Model Mechanobiol. 2024 Feb;23(1):117-128. doi: 10.1007/s10237-023-01762-x. Epub 2023 Sep 13.
Many types of cancer cells overexpress bulky glycoproteins to form a thick glycocalyx layer. The glycocalyx physically separates the cell from its surroundings, but recent work has shown that the glycocalyx can paradoxically increase adhesion to soft tissues and therefore promote the metastasis of cancer cells. This surprising phenomenon occurs because the glycocalyx forces adhesion molecules (called integrins) on the cell's surface into clusters. These integrin clusters have cooperative effects that allow them to form stronger adhesions to surrounding tissues than would be possible with equivalent numbers of un-clustered integrins. These cooperative mechanisms have been intensely scrutinized in recent years. A more nuanced understanding of the biophysical underpinnings of glycocalyx-mediated adhesion could uncover therapeutic targets, deepen our general understanding of cancer metastasis, and elucidate general biophysical processes that extend far beyond the realm of cancer research. This work examines the hypothesis that the glycocalyx has the additional effect of increasing mechanical tension experienced by clustered integrins. Integrins function as mechanosensors that undergo catch bonding-meaning the application of moderate tension increases integrin bond lifetime relative to the lifetime of integrins experiencing low tension. In this work, a three-state chemomechanical catch bond model of integrin tension is used to investigate catch bonding in the presence of a bulky glycocalyx. A pseudo-steady-state approximation is applied, which relies on the assumption that integrin bond dynamics occur on a much faster timescale than the evolution of the full adhesion between the plasma membrane and the substrate. Force-dependent kinetic rate constants are used to calculate a steady-state distribution of integrin-ligand bonds for Gaussian-shaped adhesion geometries. The relationship between the energy of the system and adhesion geometry is then analyzed in the presence and absence of catch bonding in order to evaluate the extent to which catch bonding alters the energetics of adhesion formation. This modeling suggests that a bulky glycocalyx can lightly trigger catch bonding, increasing the bond lifetime of integrins at adhesion edges by up to 100%. The total number of integrin-ligand bonds within an adhesion is predicted to increase by up to ~ 60% for certain adhesion geometries. Catch bonding is predicted to decrease the activation energy of adhesion formation by ~ 1-4 kT, which translates to a ~ 3-50 × increase in the kinetic rate of adhesion nucleation. This work reveals that integrin mechanics and clustering likely both contribute to glycocalyx-mediated metastasis.
许多类型的癌细胞过度表达大体积糖蛋白,形成厚厚的糖萼层。糖萼层将细胞与其周围环境物理隔离,但最近的研究表明,糖萼层可以通过增加与软组织的粘附来促进癌细胞的转移。这种令人惊讶的现象发生是因为糖萼层迫使细胞表面的粘附分子(称为整合素)形成簇。这些整合素簇具有协同作用,使它们能够与周围组织形成比没有簇集的整合素形成的粘附更强的粘附。近年来,这些协同机制受到了深入研究。对糖萼介导的粘附的生物物理基础有更细微的理解,可以揭示治疗靶点,加深我们对癌症转移的一般理解,并阐明远远超出癌症研究领域的一般生物物理过程。这项工作检验了这样一个假设,即糖萼具有增加簇集整合素所经历的机械张力的额外作用。整合素作为机械感受器发挥作用,经历着捕获键合的过程——这意味着适度张力的施加会增加整合素键的寿命,相对于经历低张力的整合素的寿命。在这项工作中,使用了整合素张力的三态化学机械捕获键模型来研究存在大体积糖萼时的捕获键合。应用了准稳态近似,该近似依赖于整合素键动力学在比质膜与基底之间的完全粘附演变快得多的时间尺度上发生的假设。力依赖性的动力学速率常数用于计算高斯型粘附几何形状的整合素-配体键的稳态分布。然后分析系统能量与粘附几何形状之间的关系,以评估捕获键合在多大程度上改变粘附形成的能量。该模型表明,大体积的糖萼可以轻微触发捕获键合,使粘附边缘的整合素键寿命延长多达 100%。对于某些粘附几何形状,预测粘附内的整合素-配体键总数将增加多达 60%。预测捕获键合会降低粘附形成的活化能约 1-4 kT,这相当于粘附成核的动力学速率增加约 3-50 倍。这项工作表明,整合素力学和聚类都可能导致糖萼介导的转移。