Differential Response to Mechanical Cues in Uterine Fibroid Versus Paired Myometrial Cells

Reprod Sci. 2023 Nov;30(11):3305-3314. doi: 10.1007/s43032-023-01267-z. Epub 2023 May 30.

Abstract

Uterine leiomyomas, or fibroids, are common, benign tumors for which hysterectomy is the only definitive treatment. The extracellular matrix of fibroids is disorganized and stiffer than the surrounding myometrial tissue. To understand how stiffness affects fibroid cells, patient-matched fibroid and myometrial cells were cultured on substrates with stiffnesses varying from 0.2 to 150 kPa. Fibroid cells grew more slowly than myometrial cells overall, and only the myometrial cells altered their growth rate in response to stiffness. In both cell types, cell proliferation decreased with inhibition of PI3K and increased with inhibition of IGF-1. The cellular area was greater for the fibroid cells. The only significant effect of stiffness on the cell area was between the 0.2 and 64 kPa substrates, and this was true for both cell types. To investigate intracellular stiffness, intracellular particle tracking microrheology was used. Fibroid cells exhibited a more than 100-fold increase in elastic modulus at a frequency of 1 Hz in response to the addition of external stress, while myometrial cells showed little change in elastic modulus. Overall, the responses of both cells followed similar trends in response to stiffness and inhibitors, although the response was attenuated in the fibroid cells. The changes that were demonstrated by the change in intracellular stiffness with response to compression suggest that other mechanical forces may provide insight into differences in the two cell types.

Keywords: Cytoskeletal stiffness; Substrate stiffness; Uterine fibroids.

MeSH terms

  • Cues
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Hysterectomy
  • Leiomyoma* / metabolism
  • Myometrium / metabolism
  • Uterine Neoplasms* / metabolism