TY - JOUR
T1 - Microenvironment of a tumor-organoid system enhances hepatocellular carcinoma malignancyrelated hallmarks
AU - Wang, Yang
AU - Takeishi, Kazuki
AU - Li, Zhao
AU - Cervantes-Alvarez, Eduardo
AU - de L’Hortet, Lexandra Collin
AU - Guzman-Lepe, Jorge
AU - Cui, Xiao
AU - Zhu, Jiye
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the following grants: Natural Science Foundation of China grant # 81502509, 81470874; Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province grant # LY13H030009; Funding of Beijing Key Laboratory of Liver Cancer and Fibrosis.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Taylor & Francis.
PY - 2017/5/24
Y1 - 2017/5/24
N2 - Organ-like microenviroment and 3-dimensional (3D) cell culture conformations have been suggested as promising approaches to mimic in a micro-scale a whole organ cellular functions and interactions present in vivo. We have used this approach to examine biologic features of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells. In this study, we demonstrate that hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells, fibroblasts, endothelial cells and extracellular matrix can generate organoid-like spheroids that enhanced numerous features of human HCC observed in vivo. We show that the addition of non-parenchymal cells such as fibroblast and endothelial cells is required for spheroid formation as well as the maintenance of the tissue-like structure. Furthermore, HCC cells cultured as spheroids with non-parenchymal cells express more neo-angiogenesis-related markers (VEGFR2, VEGF, HIF-α), tumor-related inflammatory factors (CXCR4, CXCL12, TNF-α) and moleculesrelated to induced epithelial-mesenchymal transition (TGFβ, Vimentin, MMP9) compared with organoids containing only HCC cells. These results demonstrate the importance of non-parenchymal cells in the cellular composition of HCC organoids. The novelty of the multicellular-based organotypic culture system strongly supports the integration of this approach in a high throughput approach to identified patient-specific HCC malignancy and accurate anti-tumor therapy screening after surgery.
AB - Organ-like microenviroment and 3-dimensional (3D) cell culture conformations have been suggested as promising approaches to mimic in a micro-scale a whole organ cellular functions and interactions present in vivo. We have used this approach to examine biologic features of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells. In this study, we demonstrate that hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells, fibroblasts, endothelial cells and extracellular matrix can generate organoid-like spheroids that enhanced numerous features of human HCC observed in vivo. We show that the addition of non-parenchymal cells such as fibroblast and endothelial cells is required for spheroid formation as well as the maintenance of the tissue-like structure. Furthermore, HCC cells cultured as spheroids with non-parenchymal cells express more neo-angiogenesis-related markers (VEGFR2, VEGF, HIF-α), tumor-related inflammatory factors (CXCR4, CXCL12, TNF-α) and moleculesrelated to induced epithelial-mesenchymal transition (TGFβ, Vimentin, MMP9) compared with organoids containing only HCC cells. These results demonstrate the importance of non-parenchymal cells in the cellular composition of HCC organoids. The novelty of the multicellular-based organotypic culture system strongly supports the integration of this approach in a high throughput approach to identified patient-specific HCC malignancy and accurate anti-tumor therapy screening after surgery.
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U2 - 10.1080/15476278.2017.1322243
DO - 10.1080/15476278.2017.1322243
M3 - Article
C2 - 28548903
AN - SCOPUS:85019652782
SN - 1547-6278
VL - 13
SP - 83
EP - 94
JO - Organogenesis
JF - Organogenesis
IS - 3
ER -