| Literature DB >> 36089610 |
Camille Jubelin1,2,3, Javier Muñoz-Garcia1,2, Laurent Griscom4, Denis Cochonneau2, Emilie Ollivier2, Marie-Françoise Heymann2, François M Vallette5, Lisa Oliver5,6, Dominique Heymann7,8,9.
Abstract
Cancer is a multifactorial disease that is responsible for 10 million deaths per year. The intra- and inter-heterogeneity of malignant tumors make it difficult to develop single targeted approaches. Similarly, their diversity requires various models to investigate the mechanisms involved in cancer initiation, progression, drug resistance and recurrence. Of the in vitro cell-based models, monolayer adherent (also known as 2D culture) cell cultures have been used for the longest time. However, it appears that they are often less appropriate than the three-dimensional (3D) cell culture approach for mimicking the biological behavior of tumor cells, in particular the mechanisms leading to therapeutic escape and drug resistance. Multicellular tumor spheroids are widely used to study cancers in 3D, and can be generated by a multiplicity of techniques, such as liquid-based and scaffold-based 3D cultures, microfluidics and bioprinting. Organoids are more complex 3D models than multicellular tumor spheroids because they are generated from stem cells isolated from patients and are considered as powerful tools to reproduce the disease development in vitro. The present review provides an overview of the various 3D culture models that have been set up to study cancer development and drug response. The advantages of 3D models compared to 2D cell cultures, the limitations, and the fields of application of these models and their techniques of production are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: 3D cell culture; Bioprinting; Cancer; Liquid-based 3D culture; Microfluidics; Multicellular tumor spheroid; Organoid; Scaffold-based 3D culture
Year: 2022 PMID: 36089610 PMCID: PMC9465969 DOI: 10.1186/s13578-022-00887-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Biosci ISSN: 2045-3701 Impact factor: 9.584
Fig. 1Comparison of the publication rate on spheroids and organoids over the past decade. For spheroids, the query used was: [(((Cancer) OR (Neoplasms)) AND ((spheroid) OR (tumorosphere))) NOT (Review)]. For organoids, the query used was: [(((Cancer) OR (Neoplasms)) AND ((organoid) OR (tumoroid))) NOT (Review)]
Fig. 2Liquid-based 3D cultures. A Liquid overlay; B Hanging drop; C Agitation-based: spinner flask (left), gyratory shaking (middle), rotary cell culture system/rotating wall vessel (right); D Magnetic levitation; E Microcarrier beads
Fig. 3Liquid overlay technique culture. Osteosarcoma MNNG/HOS (A) and SAOS-2 cells (B), colorectal adenocarcinoma Caco-2 (C), colon cancer HT29 (D), glioblastoma U251 (E) or prostate carcinoma LnCaP (F) cells were seeded into a 96-well low-attachment plates and cultured for 7 days. Scale bar corresponds to 500 µm
List of natural and synthetic polymers used for the production of scaffolds
| Type of polymer | Subtype of polymer | Advantages (+)/disadvantages (−) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Natural scaffold | Protein-based | Collagen Elastin Fibronectin Fibrin Gelatin Silk fibroin | |
| Polysaccharide-based | Glycosaminoglycan (hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulfate) Alginate Chitosan | ||
| Decellularized ECM | |||
| Synthetic scaffolds | PEG pHEMA | − Lower biocompatibility than natural scaffolds | |
PVA SAPs | RADA16-I (commercially available as Puramatrix®) Fmoc (commercially available as Biogelx®) H9e FEFK MAX1 | ||
| Aliphatic polyester | PCL PGA PLA PLGA |
ECM extracellular matrix, PEG poly(ethylene) glycol, pHEMA poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate), PVA poly(vinyl alcohol), SAPs self-assembling peptides, PCL polycaprolactone, PGA poly(glycolic acid), PLA poly(lactic acid), PLGA poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid
Methods of production of scaffolds and their advantages and disadvantages
| Method of production | Description of the mechanism | Advantages (+)/Disadvantages (−) | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lyophilisation/freeze-drying | Polymers are solubilized in solvent, before being subjected to gelation sublimation of solid polymers (gel or foam) followed by freeze drying under vacuum | + High porosity and pore interconnectivity – Small pore size − Irregular porosity − Time consuming process (days) − Residual solvent that may be harmful to cells − High energy-consuming | [ |
| SCPL | Insoluble salt particles are added to a solution of polymers solubilized in solvent. After solvent evaporation, a composite of polymers embedded with salt particles is obtained. Repeated washing of the composite with water allows the salt elimination and then the formation of a porous scaffold | + Simple + Reproducible + No specific instrument required − Limited interconnectivity − Time consuming process (days) − Residual solvents that may induce cell damages | [ |
| Gas foaming | Can be done chemically by: i) producing hydrophobic gas bubbles in liquid solution of polymers; ii) physically by subjecting a solid polymer to a high pressure gas that can dissolve into it and expands when the pressure is reduced, thus producing cavities when the bubbles collapse. It can be associated with SCPL | + High porosity + Controlled pore size + Solvent-free − Limited interconnectivity | [ |
| TIPS | Relies on the change in thermal energy to transform a homogeneous mixture of polymer and solvent into a multiple-phase system, composed of a polymer-rich phase (solvent-poor phase) and a polymer-poor phase (solvent rich phase). The solution is quenched below the freezing point of the solvent, and the solvent is removed by freeze-drying | + Easily implementable + High interconnectivity + Easy modulation of pore size and structure − Time consuming process (days) − Residual solvents may induce cell damages − High energy-consuming | [ |
| Electrospinning | A charged liquid with a voltage high enough to counteract surface tension will stretch and erupt into a jet. It will solidify into a fibre when projected on a collector | + High porosity + High interconnectivity + Low cost + Most soluble polymers can be used + Mimic the fibrillar structure of ECM − Complex generation of 3D structure − Residual solvents that may induce cell damages − Small pores that lead to poor cell infiltration and distribution − Low mechanical strength | [ |
| Self-assembly | Spontaneous assembling of monomers into supramolecular nanostructures after exposure to pH or temperature modifications or enzymatic treatment | + Different types of structure can be generated depending on the synthesis conditions + Easy to functionalize with various molecules + Less toxic because does not require cross-linker reagents + Low cost and rapid syntehesis − Difficult to control size of the self-assembled nanostructure − May be unstable under liquid conditions | [ |
| Rapid prototyping | Describes a group of manufacturing processes (e.g. stereolitography, 3D printing, selective laser sintering) that enables fabrication of scaffold layer by layer with precise spatial organization from a computer aided design (CAD) | + High control on pore size, porosity, and interconnectivity + Good resolution + Good reproducibility − Expensive − Time-consuming (creation of the design) − Potential wasting of polymers − Potential cytotoxicity of the polymers used | [ |
SCPL solvent-casting and particulate-leaching, TIPS thermally induced phase separation
Fig. 4Microfluidic platforms. A Parsortix™ microfluidic platform for isolating circulating tumor cells based on their size and their deformability properties; B Image of PDMS microsystems dedicated to particle separation: spiral microfluidic systems (top); deterministic lateral displacement particle separation system (down). Both are placed on 60 × 22 mm coverslips
Materials used to engineer microfluidic platforms
| Material | Properties/characteristics | Advantages (+) /disadvantages (−) | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glass | Transparent Stiff No gas permeability Hydrophilic surface | + Highly reproducible + No absorption of molecules − Not permeable to O2 − Prone to breaking − Relatively expensive | [ |
| PDMS | Transparent Soft, flexible Gas permeability Highly hydrophobic surface | + Rapid prototyping + Low cost + Permeable to O2 + Low auto-fluorescence − High gas permeability can lead to evaporation − Possible absorption of small hydrophobic molecules and proteins − Poor resistance to solvents and acids/bases − Deformable | [ |
| PMMA | Transparent Stiff Low gas permeability Hydrophobic surface | + Low auto-fluorescence + Lower cost than PDMS + lower evaporation rate than PDMS + More resistant to small hydrophobic molecules and proteins absorption than PDMS + Good solvent and acid/base resistance − Long culture are impossible because of the low O2 permeability − Require treatment to increase hydrophobic properties | [ |
| PC | Transparent Stiff Low gas permeability Hydrophobic surface | + Lower cost than PDMS + Good solvent and acid/base resistance + More resistant to small hydrophobic molecules and proteins absorption than PDMS − High auto-fluorescence − The low permeability to O2 do not allow long term cultures − Require treatment to increase hydrophobic properties | [ |
| PS | Transparent Stiff Low gas permeability Hydrophobic surface | + Lower evaporation rate than PDMS + Good acid/base resistance − Poor resistance to solvents − The low permeability to O2 do not allow long term cultures − High fluorescence − Require treatment to increase hydrophobic properties | [ |
| PU | Transparent Soft to stiff Hydrophobic surface | + Tunable rigidity (duromoter shore hardness from A to D) + More resistant to small hydrophobic molecules and proteins absorption than PDMS + Good resistance to abrasion − Require treatment to increase hydrophobic properties | [ |
PDMS polydimethylsiloxane, PMMA poly(methyl methacrylate), PC polycarbonate, PS polystyrene, PU polyurethane
Bioprinting: categories, mechanism involved, advantages and disadvantages
| Type | Subtype | Advantages (+)/disadvantages (−) |
|---|---|---|
| Droplet-based bioprinting | Inkjet-based bioprinting: either relies on Plateau-Rayleigh instability phenomenon (CIJ), or on the generation of droplets by a thermal, piezoelectric or electrostatic stimulus that overcome the surface tension force of the bioink at the nozzle (DOD) EHDJ: use back pressure to push the bioink to the nozzle tip until forming a spherical meniscus. Then, a high voltage is applied between the tip of the nozzle and the bioink, which creates an electric field that overcomes surface tension Acoustic bioprinting: the bioink is ejected from an open pool instead of a nozzle, thanks to the action of an acoustic field whose waves focalize at the pool exit and overcome the surface tension force of the bioink at the nozzle Microvalve bioprinting: a voltage applied will open the microvalve that gate the nozzle tip, and with association with a pneumatic back pressure, the bioink is ejected | + High printing speed + Low cost + High cell viability − Require specific equipment − Low cell density printable − Low bioink viscosity − Clogging issues − Weak mechanical integrity of the construct |
| Extrusion-based bioprinting | Pneumatic: use of air pressure to extrude the bioink Mechanical: use of a piston or a screw to extrude the bioink Solenoid: use the effect of electric current on magnetism. A ring magnet localized around the nozzle attracts a second magnet that floats in the bioink inside the syringe barrel, thus closing the nozzle hole and preventing bioink to flow through. When an electrical pulses are generated into a coil surrounding the syringe barrel, it cancels the magnetic attraction between the ring and floating magnet, allowing the bioink to flow through the nozzle onto the substrate | + Simplicity of the system + High scalability + Good structural integrity + High cell density printable + High bioink viscosity − Lower resolution than inkjet- and laser-assisted bioprinting (100 µm) − High sheer stress can impact cell viability − Clogging issues − Slow printing speed − Require sheer thinning bioink |
| Laser-assisted bioprinting | Cells in bioink: consists in a donor slide that contains a transparent layer, most often a laser energy-absorbing layer, and a layer of cell trapped in bioink. A laser goes through the transparent layer, its energy is absorbed by a metal or biopolymer layer, which creates local evaporation and the high gas pressure propels a droplet from the bioink layer onto the substrate (LIFT, AFA-LIFT, BioLP, MAPL-DW) Cells in liquid media: cells are in suspension in liquid media placed above a substrate, and a weak powered laser go through cell suspension and push the cells down onto the substrate (LG DW) | + High cell viability + High resolution (5 µm) + Good printing speed + No clogging issues + Higher cell density printable than with droplet-based bioprinting − Low bioink viscosity − Laser exposure can lead to phototoxic damages − Metallic nanoparticles in the absorbing layer can be cytotoxic − High cost − Complexity of the donor slide production |
| Stereolitography bioprinting | Direct laser writing: a laser trace lines across the photopolymer surface to cure it Mask projection: use either a patterned physical or digital mask to filter light and cure a whole layer of photopolymer at once | + Highest resolution among all bioprinting methods + Low cost + High cell density printable + No clogging issues + Good printing speed with masks + High bioink viscosity − UV and IR phototoxicity can lead to low cell viability − Few bioink compatible with stereolithography bioprinting |
CIJ continuous inkjet, DOD drop-on-demand, EHDJ electrohydrodynamic jetting bioprinting, LIFT laser-induced forward transfer, AFA-LIFT absorbing film-assisted laser-induced forward transfer, BioLP biological laser processing, MAPL-DW matrix-assisted pulsed laser evaporation direct writing, LG DW laser-guided direct writing
Fig. 53D culture models for spheroids or tumoroids production. Tumor spheroids are often generated from cell lines, through liquid based-, scaffold based-, microfluidics or bioprinting methods. Depending on the cells added to the model, the tumor spheroid will be mainly composed of cancer cells and other cells and components of the microenvironment can be added. Tumor spheroids often show a round shape. Tumor organoids (or tumoroids) are usually generated from patient tissue samples by using two methods: (i) The submerged culture method that allows the amplification of epithelial cancer stem cells which are then able to produce ECM; (ii) The air–liquid culture method that allows the inclusion of stromal components to the tumoroids. Since tumoroids are self-organizing tissues, they will have a more complex structure than spheroids