Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: https://hdl.handle.net/1822/91816

TítuloCo-axial hydrogel spinning for facile biofabrication of prostate cancer-like 3D models
Autor(es)Guimarães, Carlos Ferreira
Liu, Shiqin
Wang, Jie
Purcell, Emma
Ozedirne, Tugba
Ren, Tanchen
Aslan, Merve
Yin, Qingqing
Reis, R. L.
Stoyanova, Tanya
Demirci, Utkan
Palavras-chave3D in vitro models
Biofabrication
Co-axial
Drug testing
Polysaccharides
DataFev-2024
EditoraIOP Publishing
RevistaBiofabrication
CitaçãoGuimarães C. F., Liu S., Wang J., Purcell E., Ozedirne T., Ren T., Aslan M., Yin Q., Reis R. L., Stoyanova T., Demirci U. Co-axial hydrogel spinning for facile biofabrication of prostate cancer-like 3D models, Biofabrication, Vol. 16, pp. 025017, 1758-5090, 2024
Resumo(s)Glandular cancers are amongst the most prevalent types of cancer, which can develop in many different organs, presenting challenges in their detection as well as high treatment variability and failure rates. For that purpose, anticancer drugs are commonly tested in cancer cell lines grown in 2D tissue culture on plastic dishes in vitro, or in animal models in vivo. However, 2D culture models diverge significantly from the 3D characteristics of living tissues and animal models require extensive animal use and time. Glandular cancers, such as prostate cancerâ the second leading cause of male cancer deathâ typically exist in co-centrical architectures where a cell layer surrounds an acellular lumen. Herein, this spatial cellular position and 3D architecture, containing dual compartments with different hydrogel materials, is engineered using a simple co-axial nozzle setup, in a single step utilizing prostate as a model of glandular cancer. The resulting hydrogel soft structures support viable prostate cancer cells of different cell lines and enable over-time maturation into cancer-mimicking aggregates surrounding the acellular core. The biofabricated cancer mimicking structures are then used as a model to predict the inhibitory efficacy of the poly ADP ribose polymerase inhibitor, Talazoparib, and the antiandrogen drug, Enzalutamide, in the growth of the cancer cell layer. Our results show that the obtained hydrogel constructs can be adapted to quickly obtain 3D cancer models which combine 3D physiological architectures with high-throughput screening to detect and optimize anti-cancer drugs in prostate and potentially other glandular cancer types.
TipoArtigo
URIhttps://hdl.handle.net/1822/91816
ISSN1758-5090
Versão da editora10.1088/1758-5090/ad2535
Arbitragem científicayes
AcessoAcesso embargado (2 Anos)
Aparece nas coleções:3B’s - Artigos em revistas/Papers in scientific journals

Ficheiros deste registo:
Ficheiro Descrição TamanhoFormato 
21138-guimarães-2024-biofabrication-16-025017.pdf
  Até 2026-03-01
5,29 MBAdobe PDFVer/Abrir

Partilhe no FacebookPartilhe no TwitterPartilhe no DeliciousPartilhe no LinkedInPartilhe no DiggAdicionar ao Google BookmarksPartilhe no MySpacePartilhe no Orkut
Exporte no formato BibTex mendeley Exporte no formato Endnote Adicione ao seu ORCID