| Literature DB >> 25768338 |
Delphine Antoni1,2, Hélène Burckel3, Elodie Josset4, Georges Noel5,6.
Abstract
Cell culture is an important tool for biological research. Two-dimensional cell culture has been used for some time now, but growing cells in flat layers on plastic surfaces does not accurately model the in vivo state. As compared to the two-dimensional case, the three-dimensional (3D) cell culture allows biological cells to grow or interact with their surroundings in all three dimensions thanks to an artificial environment. Cells grown in a 3D model have proven to be more physiologically relevant and showed improvements in several studies of biological mechanisms like: cell number monitoring, viability, morphology, proliferation, differentiation, response to stimuli, migration and invasion of tumor cells into surrounding tissues, angiogenesis stimulation and immune system evasion, drug metabolism, gene expression and protein synthesis, general cell function and in vivo relevance. 3D culture models succeed thanks to technological advances, including materials science, cell biology and bioreactor design.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25768338 PMCID: PMC4394490 DOI: 10.3390/ijms16035517
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
3D cell culture: Models, advantages and limitations.
| Characteristics | Properties |
|---|---|
| 3D culture models | Whole animals and organotypic explant cultures |
| Cell spheroids cultures | |
| Polarized epithelial cell cultures | |
| Microcarrier cultures | |
| Tissues-engineered models | |
| Advantages | Cell number monitoring |
| Viability | |
| Morphology | |
| Proliferation | |
| Differentiation | |
| Response to stimuli | |
| Cell–cell communication | |
| Migration of tumor cells into surrounding tissues | |
| Invasion of tumor cells into surrounding tissues | |
| Cell polarization | |
| Angiogenesis stimulation | |
| Immune system evasion | |
| Drug metabolism | |
| Gene expression | |
| Protein synthesis | |
| General cell function | |
| Physiological genotype relevance | |
| Physiological phenotype relevance | |
| Limitations | Reproducibility between batches of biomimetic scaffolds |
| Extraction of all cells for analysis with increased size and tortuosity | |
| Creation of 3D matrices | |
| Capacity to scale up or down a single 3D format | |
| Handling of post culturing processing | |
| Imaging depending on the scaffold size, material transparency and microscope depth | |
| Performance, sensitivity and compatibility with high-throughput screening instruments | |
| Optimization for 3D cell culturing of the assays used to determine the cellular response to drug interaction (dose dependent cell viability, cell–cell/cell–matrix interaction, cell migration) | |
| Control of culture conditions (temperature and pH) |
Figure 1(A,B) Disposable rotating-wall vessel culture, four station rotator base, Synthecon®, Houston, TX, USA; (C) Cellular spheroids of glioblastoma cells produced after 6 days by using rotating-wall vessel; (D) Tint of a blade of cellular spheroids of glioblastoma cells by the hematoxyline-eosine after 4 weeks culture (Radiobiology Laboratory, EA 3430, Strasbourg, France).