학술논문

A bulky glycocalyx fosters metastasis formation by promoting G1 cell cycle progression.
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Cell Line
Tumor
Glycocalyx
Animals
Humans
Mice
Mammary Neoplasms
Animal
Disease Models
Animal
Cell Cycle
Cell Proliferation
Mucin-1
Carcinogenesis
biophysics
cancer biology
cell proliferation
glycocalyx
integrins
metastasis
mouse
mucins
structural biology
Cell Line
Tumor
Mammary Neoplasms
Animal
Disease Models
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Language
Abstract
Metastasis depends upon cancer cell growth and survival within the metastatic niche. Tumors which remodel their glycocalyces, by overexpressing bulky glycoproteins like mucins, exhibit a higher predisposition to metastasize, but the role of mucins in oncogenesis remains poorly understood. Here we report that a bulky glycocalyx promotes the expansion of disseminated tumor cells in vivo by fostering integrin adhesion assembly to permit G1 cell cycle progression. We engineered tumor cells to display glycocalyces of various thicknesses by coating them with synthetic mucin-mimetic glycopolymers. Cells adorned with longer glycopolymers showed increased metastatic potential, enhanced cell cycle progression, and greater levels of integrin-FAK mechanosignaling and Akt signaling in a syngeneic mouse model of metastasis. These effects were mirrored by expression of the ectodomain of cancer-associated mucin MUC1. These findings functionally link mucinous proteins with tumor aggression, and offer a new view of the cancer glycocalyx as a major driver of disease progression.