Author:
Saggioro Mattia,D’Agostino Stefania,Veltri Giulia,Bacchiega Maira,Tombolan Lucia,Zanon Carlo,Gamba Piergiorgio,Serafin Valentina,Muraro Manuele Giuseppe,Martin Ivan,Pozzobon Michela
Abstract
AbstractAlthough a rare disease, rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is one of the most common cancers in children the more aggressive and metastatic subtype is the alveolar RMS (ARMS). Survival outcomes with metastatic disease remain dismal and the need for new models that recapitulate key pathological features, including cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions, is warranted. Here, we report an organotypic model that captures cellular and molecular determinants of invasive ARMS. We cultured the ARMS cell line RH30 on a collagen sponge in a perfusion-based bioreactor (U-CUP), obtaining after 7 days a 3D construct with homogeneous cell distribution. Compared to static culture, perfusion flow induced higher cell proliferation rates (20% vs. 5%), enhanced secretion of active MMP-2, and upregulation of the Rho pathway, associated with cancer cell dissemination. Consistently, the ECM genes LAMA1 and LAMA2, the antiapoptotic gene HSP90, identified in patient databases as hallmarks of invasive ARMS, were higher under perfusion flow at mRNA and protein level. Our advanced ARMS organotypic model mimics (1) the interactions cells-ECM, (2) the cell growth maintenance, and (3) the expression of proteins that characterize tumor expansion and aggressiveness. In the future, the perfusion-based model could be used with primary patient-derived cell subtypes to create a personalized ARMS chemotherapy screening system.
Funder
Università degli Studi di Padova
Foundation Institute of Pediatric Research Città della Speranza, Padova
Fondazione Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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