Microwell‐based flow culture increases viability and restores drug response in prostate cancer spheroids

Author:

Payne Marie C.1ORCID,Ho SumYat2,Hashimoto Takao3,Imboden Sara1ORCID,Diaz Johnny A.3,Lee Brandon S.4,Rupert Melissa J.4,Cai Nathan Y.4,Goldstein Andrew S.3,Lin Neil Y. C.145

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering University of California Los Angeles California USA

2. Department of Biochemistry University of California Los Angeles California USA

3. Departments of Molecular, Cell & Developmental Biology and Urology University of California Los Angeles California USA

4. Department of Bioengineering University of California Los Angeles California USA

5. Institute for Quantitative and Computational Biosciences University of California Los Angeles California USA

Abstract

Abstract3D cancer spheroids represent a highly promising model for study of cancer progression and therapeutic development. Wide‐scale adoption of cancer spheroids, however, remains a challenge due to the lack of control over hypoxic gradients that may cloud the assessment of cell morphology and drug response. Here, we present a Microwell Flow Device (MFD) that generates in‐well laminar flow around 3D tissues via repetitive tissue sedimentation. Using a prostate cancer cell line, we demonstrate the spheroids in the MFD exhibit improved cell growth, reduced necrotic core formation, enhanced structural integrity, and downregulated expression of cell stress genes. The flow‐cultured spheroids also exhibit an improved sensitivity to chemotherapy with greater transcriptional response. These results demonstrate how fluidic stimuli reveal the cellular phenotype previously masked by severe necrosis. Our platform advances 3D cellular models and enables study into hypoxia modulation, cancer metabolism, and drug screening within pathophysiological conditions.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Molecular Medicine,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine

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