| Literature DB >> 34950592 |
Julian M Rozenberg1,2, Gleb I Filkov2,3, Alexander V Trofimenko3, Evgeny A Karpulevich4, Vladimir D Parshin5, Valery V Royuk5, Marina I Sekacheva6, Mikhail O Durymanov2,3.
Abstract
Lung malignancies accounted for 11% of cancers worldwide in 2020 and remained the leading cause of cancer deaths. About 80% of lung cancers belong to non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), which is characterized by extremely high clonal and morphological heterogeneity of tumors and development of multidrug resistance. The improvement of current therapeutic strategies includes several directions. First, increasing knowledge in cancer biology results in better understanding of the mechanisms underlying malignant transformation, alterations in signal transduction, and crosstalk between cancer cells and the tumor microenvironment, including immune cells. In turn, it leads to the discovery of important molecular targets in cancer development, which might be affected pharmaceutically. The second direction focuses on the screening of novel drug candidates, synthetic or from natural sources. Finally, "personalization" of a therapeutic strategy enables maximal damage to the tumor of a patient. The personalization of treatment can be based on the drug screening performed using patient-derived tumor xenografts or in vitro patient-derived cell models. 3D multicellular cancer spheroids, generated from cancer cell lines or tumor-isolated cells, seem to be a helpful tool for the improvement of current NSCLC therapies. Spheroids are used as a tumor-mimicking in vitro model for screening of novel drugs, analysis of intercellular interactions, and oncogenic cell signaling. Moreover, several studies with tumor-derived spheroids suggest this model for the choice of "personalized" therapy. Here we aim to give an overview of the different applications of NSCLC spheroids and discuss the potential contribution of the spheroid model to the development of anticancer strategies.Entities:
Keywords: drug screening; immunotherapy; non-small cell lung cancer; personalized medicine; spheroid model
Year: 2021 PMID: 34950592 PMCID: PMC8688758 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.791069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Application of non-small cell lung cancer spheroids for cancer biology and drug delivery studies.
Evaluation of novel drug candidates for targeted therapy using a non-small cell lung cancer spheroid model.
| Molecular target | Inhibitor | Spheroid model | Anticancer effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MCL-1 | S63845 |
| Genetic deletion impedes pulmosphere growth | ( |
| Glut1 and PDH | Bay-876 and CPI-613 | H1299 and H1792 homotypic spheroids | Inhibition of spheroid growth | ( |
| GSK-3 | CHIR-99021 | Heterotypic spheroids of lung cancer cell lines (NCI-H460, A549, and SK-MES-1) and stromal cells (WI38 and HUVEC) | Enhances the efficacy of anticancer drugs | ( |
| STAT3 | Biscoumarin OT52 | Homotypic A549, H460, H1650 spheroids | Inhibition of spheroid formation | ( |
| ATP synthase | Oligomycin | H446 spheroids | Inhibition of spheroid formation | ( |
| miR-149-5p/MyD88 | Ursolic acid | A549 paclitaxel resistant spheroids | Reduced stemness and paclitaxel resistance | ( |
| TRAIL | Adenovirus ZD55-TRAIL | A549 spheroids | Induction of A549 cell apoptosis in spheroids | ( |
| GO-203 | MUC1-C | A549 spheroids | Inhibition of A549 spheroid formation | ( |
| Wnt/β-catenin | Trifluoperazine | Patient-derived cell line spheroids | Inhibition of spheroid formation | ( |
Non-small cell lung cancer spheroid model for the analysis of the therapeutic effects of nanomedicines.
| Nanoformulation | Spheroid model | Anticancer effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spherical nanocomplex, composed of cationic peptide and an ATP-binding aptamer-incorporated DNA scaffold with intercalated doxorubicin | A549 spheroids | Nanocomplexes caused a complete disruption of the spheroids at 24 h after treatment, whereas free doxorubicin at the same dose caused an insignificant cytotoxic effect | ( |
| Transferrin-conjugated doxorubicin-loaded lipid-coated PLGA nanoparticles | A549 spheroids | Targeted nanoparticles exhibited threefold higher spheroid growth inhibition compared with non-targeted counterparts | ( |
| Chitosan–cholesterol micelles loaded with curcumin | A549 spheroids | Superior penetration and complete inhibition of spheroid growth after treatment with nanoparticles in comparison with free curcumin | ( |
| Docetaxel-loaded PEG-PLGA redox-responsive nanoparticles | A549 spheroids | The particles have shown enhanced penetration into the spheroids in comparison with non-redox-responsive counterparts | ( |
| PEG-PCL polymeric nanoparticles conjugated with cell-penetrating peptide RLW and loaded with docetaxel | A549 spheroids | RLW-decorated nanoparticles abrogated spheroid growth and caused 20% shrinkage, whereas unmodified nanoparticles caused only spheroid growth inhibition | ( |