Griner Lesley Mathews, Gampa Kalyani, Do Toan, Nguyen Huyen, Farley David, Hogan Christopher J, Auld Douglas S, Silver Serena J
Oncology Drug Discovery: Molecular Pharmacology, Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research;
Oncology Drug Discovery: Molecular Pharmacology, Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research.
J Vis Exp. 2018 Sep 5(139):57476. doi: 10.3791/57476.
Cancer cells have routinely been cultured in two dimensions (2D) on a plastic surface. This technique, however, lacks the true environment a tumor mass is exposed to in vivo. Solid tumors grow not as a sheet attached to plastic, but instead as a collection of clonal cells in a three-dimensional (3D) space interacting with their neighbors, and with distinct spatial properties such as the disruption of normal cellular polarity. These interactions cause 3D-cultured cells to acquire morphological and cellular characteristics which are more relevant to in vivo tumors. Additionally, a tumor mass is in direct contact with other cell types such as stromal and immune cells, as well as the extracellular matrix from all other cell types. The matrix deposited is comprised of macromolecules such as collagen and fibronectin. In an attempt to increase the translation of research findings in oncology from bench to bedside, many groups have started to investigate the use of 3D model systems in their drug development strategies. These systems are thought to be more physiologically relevant because they attempt to recapitulate the complex and heterogeneous environment of a tumor. These systems, however, can be quite complex, and, although amenable to growth in 96-well formats, and some now even in 384, they offer few choices for large-scale growth and screening. This observed gap has led to the development of the methods described here in detail to culture tumor spheroids in a high-throughput capacity in 1536-well plates. These methods represent a compromise to the highly complex matrix-based systems, which are difficult to screen, and conventional 2D assays. A variety of cancer cell lines harboring different genetic mutations are successfully screened, examining compound efficacy by using a curated library of compounds targeting the Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase or MAPK pathway. The spheroid culture responses are then compared to the response of cells grown in 2D, and differential activities are reported. These methods provide a unique protocol for testing compound activity in a high-throughput 3D setting.
癌细胞通常在塑料表面进行二维(2D)培养。然而,这种技术缺乏肿瘤块在体内所接触的真实环境。实体瘤并非像附着在塑料上的薄片那样生长,而是作为三维(3D)空间中克隆细胞的集合体生长,这些细胞与相邻细胞相互作用,并具有独特的空间特性,如正常细胞极性的破坏。这些相互作用使3D培养的细胞获得与体内肿瘤更相关的形态和细胞特征。此外,肿瘤块与其他细胞类型直接接触,如基质细胞和免疫细胞,以及来自所有其他细胞类型的细胞外基质。沉积的基质由胶原蛋白和纤连蛋白等大分子组成。为了提高肿瘤学研究成果从实验室到临床的转化效率,许多研究团队已开始在其药物开发策略中研究使用3D模型系统。这些系统被认为在生理上更具相关性,因为它们试图重现肿瘤的复杂和异质性环境。然而,这些系统可能相当复杂,并且尽管适合在96孔板中生长,现在有些甚至能在384孔板中生长,但它们在大规模生长和筛选方面提供的选择很少。这种观察到的差距导致了本文详细描述的方法的开发,以便在1536孔板中以高通量能力培养肿瘤球体。这些方法是对基于高度复杂基质的系统(难以筛选)和传统2D检测方法的一种折衷。通过使用针对丝裂原活化蛋白激酶或MAPK途径的化合物精选文库,成功筛选了多种携带不同基因突变的癌细胞系,以检测化合物疗效。然后将球体培养反应与2D培养细胞的反应进行比较,并报告差异活性。这些方法为在高通量3D环境中测试化合物活性提供了独特的方案。