Stiffening of prostate cancer cells driven by actin filaments – microtubules crosstalk confers resistance to microtubule-targeting drugs
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Abstract
The crucial role of microtubules in the mitotic-related segregation of chromosomes makes them an excellent target for anticancer microtubule targeting drugs (MTDs) such as vinflunine, colchicine, and docetaxel. MTDs affect mitosis by directly perturbing the structural organization of microtubules. By a direct assessment of the biomechanical properties of prostate cancer cells exposed to different MTDs using atomic force microscopy, we show that cell stiffening is a candidate mechanism through which cancer cells preserve the original phenotype in response to the application of MTDs. While changes in cellular rigidity are typically mainly attributed to remodeling of the actin filaments in the cytoskeleton, here we provide evidence that cell stiffening can be driven by a crosstalk between actin filaments and microtubules in drug-treated cells. Our findings improve the interpretation of biomechanical data obtained for living cells in studies of various physiological and pathological processes.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00