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Engineering a Vascularized Hypoxic Tumor Model for Therapeutic Assessment

Solid tumors in advanced cancer often feature a structurally and functionally abnormal vasculature through tumor angiogenesis, which contributes to cancer progression, metastasis, and therapeutic resistances. Hypoxia is considered a major driver of angiogenesis in tumor microenvironments. However, t...

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Autores principales: Ando, Yuta, Oh, Jeong Min, Zhao, Winfield, Tran, Madeleine, Shen, Keyue
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8468635/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34571851
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells10092201
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author Ando, Yuta
Oh, Jeong Min
Zhao, Winfield
Tran, Madeleine
Shen, Keyue
author_facet Ando, Yuta
Oh, Jeong Min
Zhao, Winfield
Tran, Madeleine
Shen, Keyue
author_sort Ando, Yuta
collection PubMed
description Solid tumors in advanced cancer often feature a structurally and functionally abnormal vasculature through tumor angiogenesis, which contributes to cancer progression, metastasis, and therapeutic resistances. Hypoxia is considered a major driver of angiogenesis in tumor microenvironments. However, there remains a lack of in vitro models that recapitulate both the vasculature and hypoxia in the same model with physiological resemblance to the tumor microenvironment, while allowing for high-content spatiotemporal analyses for mechanistic studies and therapeutic evaluations. We have previously constructed a hypoxia microdevice that utilizes the metabolism of cancer cells to generate an oxygen gradient in the cancer cell layer as seen in solid tumor sections. Here, we have engineered a new composite microdevice-microfluidics platform that recapitulates a vascularized hypoxic tumor. Endothelial cells were seeded in a collagen channel formed by viscous fingering, to generate a rounded vascular lumen surrounding a hypoxic tumor section composed of cancer cells embedded in a 3-D hydrogel extracellular matrix. We demonstrated that the new device can be used with microscopy-based high-content analyses to track the vascular phenotypes, morphology, and sprouting into the hypoxic tumor section over a 7-day culture, as well as the response to different cancer/stromal cells. We further evaluated the integrity/leakiness of the vascular lumen in molecular delivery, and the potential of the platform to study the movement/trafficking of therapeutic immune cells. Therefore, our new platform can be used as a model for understanding tumor angiogenesis and therapeutic delivery/efficacy in vascularized hypoxic tumors.
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spelling pubmed-84686352021-09-27 Engineering a Vascularized Hypoxic Tumor Model for Therapeutic Assessment Ando, Yuta Oh, Jeong Min Zhao, Winfield Tran, Madeleine Shen, Keyue Cells Article Solid tumors in advanced cancer often feature a structurally and functionally abnormal vasculature through tumor angiogenesis, which contributes to cancer progression, metastasis, and therapeutic resistances. Hypoxia is considered a major driver of angiogenesis in tumor microenvironments. However, there remains a lack of in vitro models that recapitulate both the vasculature and hypoxia in the same model with physiological resemblance to the tumor microenvironment, while allowing for high-content spatiotemporal analyses for mechanistic studies and therapeutic evaluations. We have previously constructed a hypoxia microdevice that utilizes the metabolism of cancer cells to generate an oxygen gradient in the cancer cell layer as seen in solid tumor sections. Here, we have engineered a new composite microdevice-microfluidics platform that recapitulates a vascularized hypoxic tumor. Endothelial cells were seeded in a collagen channel formed by viscous fingering, to generate a rounded vascular lumen surrounding a hypoxic tumor section composed of cancer cells embedded in a 3-D hydrogel extracellular matrix. We demonstrated that the new device can be used with microscopy-based high-content analyses to track the vascular phenotypes, morphology, and sprouting into the hypoxic tumor section over a 7-day culture, as well as the response to different cancer/stromal cells. We further evaluated the integrity/leakiness of the vascular lumen in molecular delivery, and the potential of the platform to study the movement/trafficking of therapeutic immune cells. Therefore, our new platform can be used as a model for understanding tumor angiogenesis and therapeutic delivery/efficacy in vascularized hypoxic tumors. MDPI 2021-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8468635/ /pubmed/34571851 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells10092201 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ando, Yuta
Oh, Jeong Min
Zhao, Winfield
Tran, Madeleine
Shen, Keyue
Engineering a Vascularized Hypoxic Tumor Model for Therapeutic Assessment
title Engineering a Vascularized Hypoxic Tumor Model for Therapeutic Assessment
title_full Engineering a Vascularized Hypoxic Tumor Model for Therapeutic Assessment
title_fullStr Engineering a Vascularized Hypoxic Tumor Model for Therapeutic Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Engineering a Vascularized Hypoxic Tumor Model for Therapeutic Assessment
title_short Engineering a Vascularized Hypoxic Tumor Model for Therapeutic Assessment
title_sort engineering a vascularized hypoxic tumor model for therapeutic assessment
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8468635/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34571851
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells10092201
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