Fibrosis‐Encapsulated Tumoroid, A Solid Cancer Assembloid Model for Cancer Research and Drug Screening

Author:

Jang Yeonsue1,Kang Suki2,Han Hyunho13,Kang Chang Moo3,Cho Nam Hoon24,Kim Baek Gil24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urological Science Institute Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul 03722 Republic of Korea

2. Department of Pathology Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul 03722 Republic of Korea

3. Division of Hepatobiliary and Pancreatic Surgery, Department of Surgery Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul 03722 Republic of Korea

4. Brain Korea 21 Plus Project for Medical Science Yonsei University College of Medicine Seoul 03722 South Korea

Abstract

AbstractPeritumoral fibrosis is known to promote cancer progression and confer treatment resistance in various solid tumors. Consequently, developing accurate cancer research and drug screening models that replicate the structure and function of a fibrosis‐surrounded tumor mass is imperative. Previous studies have shown that self‐assembly three‐dimensional (3D) co‐cultures primarily produce cancer‐encapsulated fibrosis or maintain a fibrosis‐encapsulated tumor mass for a short period, which is inadequate to replicate the function of fibrosis, particularly as a physical barrier. To address this limitation, a multi‐layer spheroid formation method is developed to create a fibrosis‐encapsulated tumoroid (FET) structure that maintains structural stability for up to 14 days. FETs exhibited faster tumor growth, higher expression of immunosuppressive cytokines, and equal or greater resistance to anticancer drugs compared to their parental tumoroids. Additionally, FETs serve as a versatile model for traditional cancer research, enabling the study of exosomal miRNA and gene functions, as well as for mechanobiology research when combined with alginate hydrogel. Our findings suggest that the FET represents an advanced model that more accurately mimics solid cancer tissue with peritumoral fibrosis. It may show potential superiority over self‐assembly‐based 3D co‐cultures for cancer research and drug screening, and holds promise for personalized drug selection in cancer treatment.

Funder

Ministry of Education

National Research Foundation of Korea

Korea Health Industry Development Institute

Publisher

Wiley

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