Ham Stephanie L, Thakuri Pradip S, Tavana Hossein
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc. 2015 Aug;2015:2183-6. doi: 10.1109/EMBC.2015.7318823.
A major impediment to anti-cancer drug development is the lack of a reliable and inexpensive tumor model to test the efficacy of candidate compounds. This need has emerged due to the insufficiency of widely-used monolayer cultures to predict drug efficacy in vivo. Spheroids, 3D compact clusters of cancer cells, mimic important characteristics of tumors and provide a tissue analog for drug testing. Here we present a novel spheroid formation microtechnology that is simple to use and allows high throughput drug screening in 384-microwell plates. This approach is based on a polymeric aqueous two-phase system. The denser aqueous phase is mixed with cancer cells at a desired density. Using a robotic liquid handler, a drop of this cell suspension is dispensed into each well of a 384-microwell plate containing the second, immersion aqueous phase. Cancer cells remain contained in the drop, which rests on the well bottom, and form a spheroid during incubation. The use of liquid handling robotics ensures precise dispensing of a single drop, resulting in a single spheroid per well and homogenously sized spheroids within each plate. We confirmed the consistency of production of spheroids and demonstrated their biological relevance to tumors. A proof of concept study with spheroids of triple negative breast cancer cells treated with a standard chemotherapeutic compound, doxorubicin, showed the potential of this method for drug testing. This spheroid culture microtechnology presents key advantages over existing methods such as the ease of drug and viability reagent addition, ability to analyze spheroids without transferring them to a new plate, and the elimination of the need for specialized plates or devices to form spheroids. Incorporating this technology in anti-cancer drug development pipeline will help examine the efficacy of drug candidates more effectively and expedite discovery of novel drugs.
抗癌药物研发的一个主要障碍是缺乏可靠且廉价的肿瘤模型来测试候选化合物的疗效。由于广泛使用的单层培养物不足以预测体内药物疗效,这种需求应运而生。球体,即癌细胞的三维紧密簇集,模拟了肿瘤的重要特征,并为药物测试提供了一种组织类似物。在此,我们展示了一种新型的球体形成微技术,该技术使用简便,可在384孔板中进行高通量药物筛选。这种方法基于聚合物水两相系统。将密度较大的水相与癌细胞以所需密度混合。使用自动液体处理仪,将一滴这种细胞悬液滴入含有第二种浸没水相的384孔板的每个孔中。癌细胞保留在液滴中,液滴停留在孔底部,并在孵育过程中形成球体。使用液体处理机器人确保精确滴加单滴,从而在每个孔中形成单个球体,并且每个板内的球体大小均匀。我们证实了球体生产的一致性,并证明了它们与肿瘤的生物学相关性。一项用标准化疗化合物阿霉素处理三阴性乳腺癌细胞球体的概念验证研究表明了该方法在药物测试中的潜力。这种球体培养微技术相对于现有方法具有关键优势,例如易于添加药物和活力试剂、无需将球体转移到新板即可分析球体,以及无需专门的板或设备来形成球体。将该技术纳入抗癌药物研发流程将有助于更有效地检测候选药物的疗效,并加快新型药物的发现。