Título
Directing the self-assembly of tumour spheroids by bioprinting cellular heterogeneous models within alginate/gelatin hydrogels
11627/382411627/3824
Autor
Jiang, Tao
Munguía López, Jose Gil
Flores Torres, Salvador
Grant, Joel
Vijayakumar, Sanahan
De León Rodríguez, Antonio
Kinsella, Joseph M.
Resumen
"Human tumour progression is a dynamic process involving diverse biological and biochemical events such as genetic mutation and selection in addition to physical, chemical, and mechanical events occurring between cells and the tumour microenvironment. Using 3D bioprinting we have developed a method to embed MDA-MB-231 triple negative breast cancer cells, and IMR-90 fibroblast cells, within a cross-linked alginate/gelatin matrix at specific initial locations relative to each other. After 7 days of co-culture the MDA-MB-231 cells begin to form multicellular tumour spheroids (MCTS) that increase in size and frequency over time. After similar to 15 days the IMR-90 stromal fibroblast cells migrate through a non-cellularized region of the hydrogel matrix and infiltrate the MDA-MB-231 spheroids creating mixed MDA-MB-231/IMR-90 MCTS. This study provides a proof-of-concept that biomimetic in vitro tissue coculture models bioprinted with both breast cancer cells and fibroblasts will result in MCTS that can be maintained for durations of several weeks."
Fecha de publicación
2017-07Tipo de publicación
articleDOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04691-9Área de conocimiento
CIENCIAS TECNOLÓGICASColecciones
Editor
Nature Publishing GroupPalabras clave
Biomaterials – cellsBiomedical engineering
Cancer models
Tissue engineering