| Literature DB >> 34957199 |
Yushi Li1, Joyce W Y Chan1, Rainbow W H Lau1, Winnie W Y Cheung1, Alissa Michelle Wong1, Aikha M Wong1, Nathalie Wong1, Calvin Sze Hang Ng1.
Abstract
Lung cancer is a complex milieu of genomically altered cancer cells, a diverse collection of differentiated cells and nonneoplastic stroma. Lung cancer organoids is a three-dimensional structure grown from patient cancer tissue that could mimic in vivo complex behavior and cellular architecture of the cancer. Furthermore, the genomic alterations of the primary lung tumor is captured ex vivo. Lung cancer organoids have become an important preclinical model for oncology studies in recent years. It could be used to model the development of lung cancer, investigate the process of tumorigenesis, and also study the signaling pathways. The organoids could also be a platform to perform drug screening and biomarker validation of lung cancer, providing a promising prediction of patient-specific drug response. In this review, we described how lung cancer organoids have opened new avenues for translating basic cancer research into clinical therapy and discussed the latest and future developments in organoid technology, which could be further applied in lung cancer organoids research.Entities:
Keywords: disease model; drug screening; lung cancer; organoids; preclinical model
Year: 2021 PMID: 34957199 PMCID: PMC8698743 DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2021.753801
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Surg ISSN: 2296-875X
Comparison between different types of lung cancer study models.
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| Advantage | Easy handling; low cost; rapid culturing; large-scale usage. | Well retain genomic and phenotype of original patient specimens. | Well maintain the biology and genetic characteristics of original cancer; well mimic the microenvironment of initial tumor; less time consuming than PDX model; could be genetically modify. |
| Disadvantage. | Heterogeneous between different lab; genetic drift and clonal selection after long-term layer culture; lost the key characteristic of original tumor. | Expensive and time-consuming; limited passage number; lack of human TME cells. | Lack of standardized methodology; lack of vasculature component; more difficult of long-term initial and propagation. |
Figure 1Air-liquid interface (ALI) culture system: (A) Precoat collagen gel in a 0.4 μm transwell; (B) Resuspend cells with collagen gel and layered on top of presolidified collagen gel; (C) Place the transwell into cell culture dish with culture medium.
Figure 2Drug testing via patient-derived organoids models: (A) Collecting the lung cancer specimens from patients during surgery, digesting the tissue and seeding cells in growth factors reduced Matrigel; dome culturing in culture medium; organoids culturing and passage; preforming Cell Titer-Glo Luminescent cell viability assay for drug testing. (B) Representative image of long-term culture lung cancer organoids (more than five passages) in our lab.