4.4 Article

Sample preparation strategies for high-throughput mass spectrometry imaging of primary tumor organoids

Journal

JOURNAL OF MASS SPECTROMETRY
Volume 55, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jms.4452

Keywords

drug discovery; high throughput; MALDI MSI; microwells; organoids

Funding

  1. National Center for Research Resources [S10RR029531]
  2. National Institute of Mental Health [R56MH110215]
  3. NIH-NCRR [S10RR029531]
  4. NIH [R56MH110215]
  5. UWCCC Pancreatic Cancer Taskforce
  6. University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center [233-AAC9675]
  7. Stand Up to Cancer [SU2C-AACR-IG-08-16, SU2CAACR-PS-18]

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Patient-derived 3D organoids show great promise for understanding patient heterogeneity and chemotherapy response in human-derived tissue. The combination of organoid culture techniques with mass spectrometry imaging provides a label-free methodology for characterizing drug penetration, patient-specific response, and drug biotransformation. However, current methods used to grow tumor organoids employ extracellular matrices that can produce small molecule background signal during mass spectrometry imaging analysis. Here, we develop a method to isolate 3D human tumor organoids out of a Matrigel extracellular matrix into gelatin mass spectrometry compatible microarrays for high-throughput mass spectrometry imaging analysis. The alignment of multiple organoids in the same z-axis is essential for sectioning organoids together and for maintaining reproducible sample preparation on a single glass slide for up to hundreds of organoids. This method successfully removes organoids from extracellular matrix interference and provides an organized array for high-throughput imaging analysis to easily identify organoids by eye for area selection and further analysis. With this method, mass spectrometry imaging can be readily applied to organoid systems for preclinical drug development and personalized medicine research initiatives.

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