Abstract
"The accumulation of ascites in patients with ovarian cancer increases their risk of transcoelomic metastasis. Although common routes of peritoneal dissemination are known to follow distinct paths of circulating ascites, the mechanisms that initiate these currents and subsequent fluid shear stresses are not well understood. Here, we developed a patient-based, boundary-driven computational fluid dynamics model to predict an upper range of fluid shear stress generated by the accumulation of ascites. We show that ovarian cancer cells exposed to ascitic shear stresses display heightened G protein-coupled receptor mechanosignaling and the induction of an epithelial to mesenchymal-like transition through p38α mitogen-activated protein kinase and mucin 15 modulation. These findings along with a shear-induced immunomodulatory secretome position elevated shear stress as a protumoural signal. Together, this study suggests inhibition of the Gαq protein and restriction of ascites accumulation as maintenance strategies for overcoming mechanotransduction-mediated metastasis within the peritoneal cavity."
Authors
Geeta Mehta, Eric Horst, Liam Cotter, Mia Bonini, Caymen Novak, Nina Treacher, Yeye Zhang, Zoe Jackson, Ishwarya Venkata Narayanan, Fulei Wuchu, Minal Nenwani, Zachary Fischer, Alec Sunshine, Zequan Lin, Linh Tran, Deepak Nagrath, Mats Ljungman, Katherine Maturen, Analisa DiFeo, David Nordsletten
Tags
G-protein coupled receptors (GPCR), NF-κB, PLCβ, ascitic currents, epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT), fluid shear stress, glycocalyx, high grade serous ovarian cancer, mechanotransduction, mucin 15 (MUC15), transcoelomic metastasis