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Coculture System with an Organotypic Brain Slice and 3D Spheroid of Carcinoma Cells

Patients with cerebral metastasis of carcinomas have a poor prognosis. However, the process at the metastatic site has barely been investigated, in particular the role of the resident (stromal) cells. Studies in primary carcinomas demonstrate the influence of the microenvironment on metastasis, even...

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Autores principales: Chuang, Han-Ning, Lohaus, Raphaela, Hanisch, Uwe-Karsten, Binder, Claudia, Dehghani, Faramarz, Pukrop, Tobias
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MyJove Corporation 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3939073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24145580
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50881
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author Chuang, Han-Ning
Lohaus, Raphaela
Hanisch, Uwe-Karsten
Binder, Claudia
Dehghani, Faramarz
Pukrop, Tobias
author_facet Chuang, Han-Ning
Lohaus, Raphaela
Hanisch, Uwe-Karsten
Binder, Claudia
Dehghani, Faramarz
Pukrop, Tobias
author_sort Chuang, Han-Ning
collection PubMed
description Patients with cerebral metastasis of carcinomas have a poor prognosis. However, the process at the metastatic site has barely been investigated, in particular the role of the resident (stromal) cells. Studies in primary carcinomas demonstrate the influence of the microenvironment on metastasis, even on prognosis(1,2). Especially the tumor associated macrophages (TAM) support migration, invasion and proliferation(3). Interestingly, the major target sites of metastasis possess tissue-specific macrophages, such as Kupffer cells in the liver or microglia in the CNS. Moreover, the metastatic sites also possess other tissue-specific cells, like astrocytes. Recently, astrocytes were demonstrated to foster proliferation and persistence of cancer cells(4,5). Therefore, functions of these tissue-specific cell types seem to be very important in the process of brain metastasis(6,7). Despite these observations, however, up to now there is no suitable in vivo/in vitro model available to directly visualize glial reactions during cerebral metastasis formation, in particular by bright field microscopy. Recent in vivo live imaging of carcinoma cells demonstrated their cerebral colonization behavior(8). However, this method is very laborious, costly and technically complex. In addition, these kinds of animal experiments are restricted to small series and come with a substantial stress for the animals (by implantation of the glass plate, injection of tumor cells, repetitive anaesthesia and long-term fixation). Furthermore, in vivo imaging is thus far limited to the visualization of the carcinoma cells, whereas interactions with resident cells have not yet been illustrated. Finally, investigations of human carcinoma cells within immunocompetent animals are impossible(8). For these reasons, we established a coculture system consisting of an organotypic mouse brain slice and epithelial cells embedded in matrigel (3D cell sphere). The 3D carcinoma cell spheres were placed directly next to the brain slice edge in order to investigate the invasion of the neighboring brain tissue. This enables us to visualize morphological changes and interactions between the glial cells and carcinoma cells by fluorescence and even by bright field microscopy. After the coculture experiment, the brain tissue or the 3D cell spheroids can be collected and used for further molecular analyses (e.g. qRT-PCR, IHC, or immunoblot) as well as for investigations by confocal microscopy. This method can be applied to monitor the events within a living brain tissue for days without deleterious effects to the brain slices. The model also allows selective suppression and replacement of resident cells by cells from a donor tissue to determine the distinct impact of a given genotype. Finally, the coculture model is a practicable alternative to in vivo approaches when testing targeted pharmacological manipulations.
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spelling pubmed-39390732014-03-04 Coculture System with an Organotypic Brain Slice and 3D Spheroid of Carcinoma Cells Chuang, Han-Ning Lohaus, Raphaela Hanisch, Uwe-Karsten Binder, Claudia Dehghani, Faramarz Pukrop, Tobias J Vis Exp Medicine Patients with cerebral metastasis of carcinomas have a poor prognosis. However, the process at the metastatic site has barely been investigated, in particular the role of the resident (stromal) cells. Studies in primary carcinomas demonstrate the influence of the microenvironment on metastasis, even on prognosis(1,2). Especially the tumor associated macrophages (TAM) support migration, invasion and proliferation(3). Interestingly, the major target sites of metastasis possess tissue-specific macrophages, such as Kupffer cells in the liver or microglia in the CNS. Moreover, the metastatic sites also possess other tissue-specific cells, like astrocytes. Recently, astrocytes were demonstrated to foster proliferation and persistence of cancer cells(4,5). Therefore, functions of these tissue-specific cell types seem to be very important in the process of brain metastasis(6,7). Despite these observations, however, up to now there is no suitable in vivo/in vitro model available to directly visualize glial reactions during cerebral metastasis formation, in particular by bright field microscopy. Recent in vivo live imaging of carcinoma cells demonstrated their cerebral colonization behavior(8). However, this method is very laborious, costly and technically complex. In addition, these kinds of animal experiments are restricted to small series and come with a substantial stress for the animals (by implantation of the glass plate, injection of tumor cells, repetitive anaesthesia and long-term fixation). Furthermore, in vivo imaging is thus far limited to the visualization of the carcinoma cells, whereas interactions with resident cells have not yet been illustrated. Finally, investigations of human carcinoma cells within immunocompetent animals are impossible(8). For these reasons, we established a coculture system consisting of an organotypic mouse brain slice and epithelial cells embedded in matrigel (3D cell sphere). The 3D carcinoma cell spheres were placed directly next to the brain slice edge in order to investigate the invasion of the neighboring brain tissue. This enables us to visualize morphological changes and interactions between the glial cells and carcinoma cells by fluorescence and even by bright field microscopy. After the coculture experiment, the brain tissue or the 3D cell spheroids can be collected and used for further molecular analyses (e.g. qRT-PCR, IHC, or immunoblot) as well as for investigations by confocal microscopy. This method can be applied to monitor the events within a living brain tissue for days without deleterious effects to the brain slices. The model also allows selective suppression and replacement of resident cells by cells from a donor tissue to determine the distinct impact of a given genotype. Finally, the coculture model is a practicable alternative to in vivo approaches when testing targeted pharmacological manipulations. MyJove Corporation 2013-10-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3939073/ /pubmed/24145580 http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50881 Text en Copyright © 2013, Journal of Visualized Experiments http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visithttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
spellingShingle Medicine
Chuang, Han-Ning
Lohaus, Raphaela
Hanisch, Uwe-Karsten
Binder, Claudia
Dehghani, Faramarz
Pukrop, Tobias
Coculture System with an Organotypic Brain Slice and 3D Spheroid of Carcinoma Cells
title Coculture System with an Organotypic Brain Slice and 3D Spheroid of Carcinoma Cells
title_full Coculture System with an Organotypic Brain Slice and 3D Spheroid of Carcinoma Cells
title_fullStr Coculture System with an Organotypic Brain Slice and 3D Spheroid of Carcinoma Cells
title_full_unstemmed Coculture System with an Organotypic Brain Slice and 3D Spheroid of Carcinoma Cells
title_short Coculture System with an Organotypic Brain Slice and 3D Spheroid of Carcinoma Cells
title_sort coculture system with an organotypic brain slice and 3d spheroid of carcinoma cells
topic Medicine
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3939073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24145580
http://dx.doi.org/10.3791/50881
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