| Literature DB >> 25695337 |
Isaac M Adjei1, Sharma Blanka2.
Abstract
Tumors are complex tissues that consist of stromal cells, such as fibroblasts, immune cells and mesenchymal stem cells, as well as non-cellular components, in addition to neoplastic cells. Increasingly, there is evidence to suggest that these non-neoplastic cell components support cancer initiation, progression and metastasis and that their ablation or reprogramming can inhibit tumor growth. Our understanding of the activities of different parts of the tumor stroma in advancing cancer has been improved by the use of scaffold and matrix-based 3D systems originally developed for regenerative medicine. Additionally, drug delivery systems made from synthetic and natural biomaterials deliver drugs to kill stromal cells or reprogram the microenvironment for tumor inhibition. In this article, we review the impact of 3D tumor models in increasing our understanding of tumorigenesis. We also discuss how different drug delivery systems aid in the reprogramming of tumor stroma for cancer treatment.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25695337 PMCID: PMC4384103 DOI: 10.3390/jfb6010081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Funct Biomater ISSN: 2079-4983
Cellular components of tumor stroma.
| Lineage | Role in tumorigenesis |
|---|---|
| Tumor-associated macrophages | Immunosuppression; produce cytokines and growth factors |
| Neutrophils | Produce cytokines and reactive oxygen species |
| Treg cells | Immunosuppression; secrete TGF-β and IL-10 that inhibit the antitumor activity of cytotoxic T-cells and natural killer cells |
| Th cells | Production of cytokines that induce immunosuppression |
| B-cells | Production of cytokines and activation of mast cells |
| Mesenchymal stem cells | Produce cytokines that promote tumor invasiveness and metastasis; |
| Tumor-associated fibroblasts | Secrete MMPs involved in tumor remodeling; |
| Vascular endothelial cells | Form blood vessels that support tumor growth and metastasis |
Figure 1Strengths and weaknesses of 2D and 3D in vitro culture. Cells in 2D monolayer cultures lose their morphology and polarity, while cells in 3D matrices retain their morphology.
List of some nanotherapeutics at different stages of development.
| Drug name | Nanomaterial | Therapeutic | State of development |
|---|---|---|---|
| Doxil | Liposome | Doxorubicin | Approved (US, 1995; EU, 1996) |
| DaunoXome® | Liposome | Daunorubicin citrate | Approved (US, 1996) |
| Feridex | Dextran coated superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPION) | – | Approved (US, 1996) |
| Myocet | Liposome | Doxorubicin | Approved (EU, 2000) |
| Abraxane | Albumin NPs | Paclitaxel | Approved (US, 2005; EU, 2006) |
| Genexol-PM | PEG-PLA Micelle NPs | Paclitaxel | Approved (South Korea, 2007) Phase III trials |
| Lipoplatin | Liposome | Cisplatin | Phase III trials |
| OPAXIO | Polymer-drug conjugate | Paclitaxel | Phase III trials |
| Clariscan | SPION | – | Phase III trials |
| ABI-008 | Albumin NPs | Docetaxel | Phase II trials |
| AP5250 | Polymer-drug conjugate | Carboplatine platinate | Phase II trials |
| CRLX101 | Polymeric NPs | Camptothecin | Phase II trials |
| MBP-426 | liposome | Oxaliplatin | Phase II trials |
| BIND-014 | Targeted polymeric NPs | Docetaxel | Phase I trials |
| MAG-CPT | Polymer-drug conjugate | Camptothecin | Phase I trial |
Figure 2Illustration of the strategies for modulating tumor stroma for therapy. NPs injected intravenously can interact with blood vessel endothelium (1) or extravasate into the tumor stroma through the leaky tumor vasculature and bind to the ECM (2). For other applications, MSC tropism towards tumor can be used to modify the tumor stroma or induce apoptosis in cancer cells (3). MSC can be loaded with NPs that are released within tumors (4) or transformed to secrete proteins that inhibit tumor growth (5).