Long-term fluorescence hyperspectral imaging of on-chip treated co-culture tumour spheroids to follow clonal evolution

Author:

St-Georges-Robillard Amélie12ORCID,Cahuzac Maxime2,Péant Benjamin23,Fleury Hubert2,Lateef Muhammad Abdul2,Ricard Alexis2,Sauriol Alexandre2,Leblond Frédéric12,Mes-Masson Anne-Marie24,Gervais Thomas12

Affiliation:

1. Polytechnique Montréal, Department of Engineering Physics and Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Montreal, Canada

2. Centre de recherche du Centre hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal and Institut du cancer de Montréal, Montreal, Canada

3. TransMedTech Institute, Montréal, Canada

4. Université de Montréal, Department of Medicine, Montreal, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Multicellular tumour spheroids are an ideal in vitro tumour model to study clonal heterogeneity and drug resistance in cancer research because different cell types can be mixed at will. However, measuring the individual response of each cell population over time is challenging: current methods are either destructive, such as flow cytometry, or cannot image throughout a spheroid, such as confocal microscopy. Our group previously developed a wide-field fluorescence hyperspectral imaging system to study spheroids formed and cultured in microfluidic chips. In the present study, two subclones of a single parental ovarian cancer cell line transfected to express different fluorophores were produced and co-culture spheroids were formed on-chip using ratios forming highly asymmetric subpopulations. We performed a 3D proliferation assay on each cell population forming the spheroids that matched the 2D growth behaviour. Response assays to PARP inhibitors and platinum-based drugs were also performed to follow the clonal evolution of mixed populations. Our experiments show that hyperspectral imaging can detect spheroid response before observing a decrease in spheroid diameter. Hyperspectral imaging and microfluidic-based spheroid assays provide a versatile solution to study clonal heterogeneity, able to measure response in subpopulations presenting as little as 10% of the initial spheroid.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Fonds de Recherche du Québec – Nature et Technologies

Cancer Research Society

Canada Foundation for Innovation

TransMedTech Institute

Canada First Research Excellence Fund

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Biochemistry,Biophysics

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