ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2026 May 27.
Extracellular matrix (ECM) mechanics is pivotal regulators of tumor progression, yet how viscoelasticity and matrix architecture converge to shape metabolic and invasive adaptation remains insufficiently defined. We postulate that mechanical stimuli from the ECM induce coordinated changes in adhesive and metabolic pathways, and that the nature of this independent mechano-metabolic pathway is conserved across benign, low-invasive, and high-invasive bladder cancer phenotypes. Therefore, we engineered collagen-hyaluronan hydrogels with tunable stiffness to recapitulate soft and rigid tumor microenvironments and profiled bladder cancer spheroids representing benign, low-invasive, and highly invasive states. Integrating hydraulic force spectroscopy, rheology, and molecular phenotyping, we show that matrix stiffening differentially reprograms spheroid architecture, motility, and adhesion- and metabolism-related gene expression. Spheroid behavior emerged from the interplay between intrinsic mechanical properties, matrix rheology, and molecular adaptation. HCV29 spheroids formed rigid, compact structures, relying on cell-matrix adhesion rather than metabolic or proteolytic remodeling. HT1376 spheroids activated glycolysis (HK2) and MMP-2-dependent ECM remodeling in soft matrices, but remained largely nonmigratory, indicating decoupling of invasive priming from motility. T24 spheroids were soft, deformable, and highly migratory in compliant matrices, integrating metabolic reprogramming, adhesion remodeling (E-/N-cadherin, SDC4), and radial collagen fiber alignment to drive invasion. Notably, canonical FAK/AKT/mTOR signaling was absent across all spheroids, while pS6 ribosomal protein and ILK indicated noncanonical, SDC4/integrin-ILK-dependent mechanotransduction supporting cytoskeletal dynamics, metabolism, and ECM remodeling. Collagen organization further differed across spheroid types, with dense, radially aligned fibers in HT1376, intermediate architecture in HCV29, and loose, disorganized networks in T24, closely matching their distinct migratory behaviors and cell-ECM interactions. These findings reveal stage-specific mechanometabolic strategies in bladder cancer, demonstrating how ECM mechanics and architecture jointly guide invasion, metabolic adaptation, and local immune modulation, including the regulation of immune cell infiltration and tumor immune evasion.
Keywords: bladder cancer; extracellular matrix mechanics; hydrogel model; mechanotransduction; tumor microenvironment