Fischbach Claudia, Chen Ruth, Matsumoto Takuya, Schmelzle Tobias, Brugge Joan S, Polverini Peter J, Mooney David J
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, 40 Oxford Street; Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA.
Nat Methods. 2007 Oct;4(10):855-60. doi: 10.1038/nmeth1085. Epub 2007 Sep 2.
Microenvironmental conditions control tumorigenesis and biomimetic culture systems that allow for in vitro and in vivo tumor modeling may greatly aid studies of cancer cells' dependency on these conditions. We engineered three-dimensional (3D) human tumor models using carcinoma cells in polymeric scaffolds that recreated microenvironmental characteristics representative of tumors in vivo. Strikingly, the angiogenic characteristics of tumor cells were dramatically altered upon 3D culture within this system, and corresponded much more closely to tumors formed in vivo. Cells in this model were also less sensitive to chemotherapy and yielded tumors with enhanced malignant potential. We assessed the broad relevance of these findings with 3D culture of other tumor cell lines in this same model, comparison with standard 3D Matrigel culture and in vivo experiments. This new biomimetic model may provide a broadly applicable 3D culture system to study the effect of microenvironmental conditions on tumor malignancy in vitro and in vivo.
微环境条件控制肿瘤发生,而能够进行体外和体内肿瘤建模的仿生培养系统可能极大地有助于研究癌细胞对这些条件的依赖性。我们使用癌细胞在聚合物支架中构建了三维(3D)人类肿瘤模型,该支架重现了体内肿瘤的微环境特征。令人惊讶的是,肿瘤细胞在该系统内进行3D培养时,其血管生成特性发生了显著改变,并且与体内形成的肿瘤更为接近。该模型中的细胞对化疗也不太敏感,产生的肿瘤具有更高的恶性潜能。我们通过在同一模型中对其他肿瘤细胞系进行3D培养、与标准3D基质胶培养进行比较以及体内实验,评估了这些发现的广泛相关性。这种新的仿生模型可能提供一种广泛适用的3D培养系统,用于在体外和体内研究微环境条件对肿瘤恶性程度的影响。