Hannah L. Smith, Stephen A. Beers, Janos M. Kanczler, Juliet C. Gray
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Developing a 3D bone model of osteosarcoma to investigate cancer mechanisms and evaluate treatments
Osteosarcoma is the most common primary bone cancer, occurring frequently in children and young adults. Patients are treated with surgery and multi-agent chemotherapy, and despite the introduction of mifamurtide in 2011, there has been little improvement in survival for decades. 3-dimensional models offer the potential to understand the complexity of the osteosarcoma tumor microenvironment and aid in developing new treatment approaches. An osteosarcoma 3D bone core model was developed using human trabecular bone and the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM), to form a functioning vasculature. A tri-culture of cells, stromal cells, macrophages, and the Saos-2 osteosarcoma cell line, were implanted into this model to simulate components of the tumor microenvironment, and mifamurtide was tested in this context. Immunohistochemistry and micro-CT were performed to assess phenotypic and structural effects of implantation. Successful integration and angiogenesis of the bone cores were observed after incubation on the CAM. The 3D bone model also showed similar characteristics to osteosarcoma patient samples including CD68 and CD105 expression. Incubating bone cores with mifamurtide induced a reduction of cellular markers and an increase in bone volume. This 3D bone core model has the potential to investigate osteosarcoma tumor microenvironment and provides a representative model for evaluation of novel therapies.
期刊介绍:
The FASEB Journal publishes international, transdisciplinary research covering all fields of biology at every level of organization: atomic, molecular, cell, tissue, organ, organismic and population. While the journal strives to include research that cuts across the biological sciences, it also considers submissions that lie within one field, but may have implications for other fields as well. The journal seeks to publish basic and translational research, but also welcomes reports of pre-clinical and early clinical research. In addition to research, review, and hypothesis submissions, The FASEB Journal also seeks perspectives, commentaries, book reviews, and similar content related to the life sciences in its Up Front section.