Connexin membrane materials as potent inhibitors of breast cancer cell migration

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Abstract

Gap junction (GJ) channels facilitate cell-cell communication through the exchange of chemical and mechanical signals, ensuring proper tissue development and homeostasis. The complex, disease stage-dependent role of connexins in breast cancer progression has been extensively studied over the past two decades. In the early stages of breast cancer, substantial evidence supports the role of GJ channels, formed by connexins at the interfaces between neighbouring cells, as suppressors of cell migration and proliferation. These findings suggest that materials that reintroduce connexins into the tumour cell environment have the potential to inhibit cell migration. Here, we report that exposure of highly metastatic MDA-MB- 231 breast tumour cells to connexin-rich biovesicle materials potently suppresses cell migration. Specifically, these biovesicles, which can form GJ interfaces with cells, were extracted from the plasma membrane of donor cells engineered to express a high concentration of functional connexin 43 channels. These connexin-rich membrane materials dramatically reduced cell migration in both a transwell migration assay and a scratch closure assay. Collectively, these results suggest that using membrane materials to reintroduce connexins into the tumour cell environment provides a novel approach for combating cell migration and invasion.

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Ferrati, S., Gadok, A. K., Brunaugh, A. D., Zhao, C., Heersema, L. A., Smyth, H. D. C., & Stachowiak, J. C. (2017). Connexin membrane materials as potent inhibitors of breast cancer cell migration. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 14(133). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2017.0313

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