Mechanical confinement governs phenotypic plasticity in melanoma Journal Article


Authors: Hunter, M. V.; Joshi, E.; Bowker, S.; Montal, E.; Ma, Y.; Kim, Y. H.; Yang, Z.; Tuffery, L.; Li, Z.; Rosiek, E.; Browning, A.; Moncada, R.; Yanai, I.; Byrne, H.; Monetti, M.; de Stanchina, E.; Hamard, P. J.; Koche, R. P.; White, R. M.
Article Title: Mechanical confinement governs phenotypic plasticity in melanoma
Abstract: Phenotype switching is a form of cellular plasticity in which cancer cells reversibly move between two opposite extremes: proliferative versus invasive states1,2. Although it has long been hypothesized that such switching is triggered by external cues, the identity of these cues remains unclear. Here we demonstrate that mechanical confinement mediates phenotype switching through chromatin remodelling. Using a zebrafish model of melanoma coupled with human samples, we profiled tumour cells at the interface between the tumour and surrounding microenvironment. Morphological analysis of interface cells showed elliptical nuclei, suggestive of mechanical confinement by the adjacent tissue. Spatial and single-cell transcriptomics demonstrated that interface cells adopted a gene program of neuronal invasion, including the acquisition of an acetylated tubulin cage that protects the nucleus during migration. We identified the DNA-bending protein HMGB2 as a confinement-induced mediator of the neuronal state. HMGB2 is upregulated in confined cells, and quantitative modelling revealed that confinement prolongs the contact time between HMGB2 and chromatin, leading to changes in chromatin configuration that favour the neuronal phenotype. Genetic disruption of HMGB2 showed that it regulates the trade-off between proliferative and invasive states, in which confined HMGB2high tumour cells are less proliferative but more drug-resistant. Our results implicate the mechanical microenvironment as a mechanism that drives phenotype switching in melanoma.
Keywords: protein; transcription factors; organization; microtubules; dynamics; resistance; differentiation; expression; cell-migration; brn2
Journal Title: Nature
ISSN: 0028-0836
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Publication status: Online ahead of print
Date Published: 2025-08-27
Online Publication Date: 2025-08-27
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:001558722500001
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09445-6
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 40866703
Notes: The MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) is acknowledge in the PDF -- Corresponding authors is MSK author: Miranda V. Hunter -- Source: Wos
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MSK Authors
  1. Richard Mark White
    70 White
  2. Richard Patrick Koche
    185 Koche
  3. Zhuoning Li
    23 Li
  4. Emily Dina Montal
    15 Montal
  5. Miranda Victoria Hunter
    13 Hunter
  6. Yilun Ma
    11 Ma
  7. Eric Rosiek
    11 Rosiek
  8. Sydney Carol Bowker
    3 Bowker
  9. Zhifan Yang
    2 Yang
  10. Pierre-Jacques Hamard
    7 Hamard
  11. Young Hun Kim
    2 Kim
  12. Eshita Joshi
    1 Joshi