Invasive cancer cells soften collagen networks and disrupt stress-stiffening via volume exclusion, contractility and adhesion

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Abstract

Collagen networks form the structural backbone of the extracellular matrix in both healthy and cancerous tissues, exhibiting nonlinear mechanical properties that crucially regulate tissue mechanics and cell behavior. Here, we investigate how the presence of invasive breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231) influences the polymerization kinetics and mechanics of collagen networks using bulk shear rheology and rheo-confocal microscopy. We show that embedded cancer cells delay the onset of collagen polymerization due to volume exclusion effects. During polymerization, the cells (at 4% volume fraction) cause an unexpected time-dependent softening of the network. We show that this softening effect arises from active remodeling via adhesion and contractility rather than from proteolytic degradation. At higher cell volume fractions, the dominant effect of the cells shifts to volume exclusion, causing a two-fold reduction of network stiffness. Additionally, we demonstrate that cancer cells suppress the characteristic stress-stiffening response of collagen. This effect (partially) disappears when cell adhesion and contractility are inhibited, and it is absent when the cells are replaced by passive hydrogel particles. These findings provide new insights into how active inclusions modify the mechanics of fibrous networks, contributing to a better understanding of the role of cells in the mechanics of healthy and diseased tissues like invasive tumors.

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Highlights

  • Using a biomimetic tissue model based on collagen networks containing invasive cancer cells, we demonstrate that these cells soften collagen networks and impair stress-stiffening.

  • By comparing the impact of cells and passive cell-sized hydrogel beads, we show that volume exclusion, cell-matrix adhesion, and active cell contractility have distinct contributions to the changes in the mechanical properties of collagen networks.

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