Proceedings Article | 22 December 2015
KEYWORDS: Biomimetics, Cancer, Biocompatible materials, Tissue engineering, 3D modeling, Tumor growth modeling, In vitro testing, Oncology, Medicine, Drug discovery, Systems modeling, Kidney, Tumors, Tissues, Lung, Heart, Liver, Scanning electron microscopy
Rationale: Tissue engineering (TE) is an emerging alternative approach to create models of human malignant tumors for experimental oncology, personalized medicine and drug discovery studies. Being the bottom-up strategy, TE provides an opportunity to control and explore the role of every component of the model system, including cellular populations, supportive scaffolds and signalling molecules.
Objectives: As an initial step to create a new ex vivo TE model of cancer, we optimized protocols to obtain organ-specific acellular matrices and evaluated their potential as TE scaffolds for culture of normal and tumor cells.
Methods and results: Effective decellularization of animals’ kidneys, ureter, lungs, heart, and liver has been achieved by detergent-based processing. The obtained scaffolds demonstrated biocompatibility and growthsupporting potential in combination with normal (Vero, MDCK) and tumor cell lines (C26, B16). Acellular scaffolds and TE constructs have been characterized and compared with morphological methods.
Conclusions: The proposed methodology allows creation of sustainable 3D tumor TE constructs to explore the role of organ-specific cell-matrix interaction in tumorigenesis.