4.6 Article

In vitro vascularized tumor platform for modeling tumor-vasculature interactions of inflammatory breast cancer

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 117, Issue 11, Pages 3572-3590

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.27487

Keywords

angiogenesis; collagen; endothelium; HER2+breast cancer; in vitro; inflammatory breast cancer; microfluidics; sprouting; triple negative breast cancer; vasculature

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1R21CA15845401A1, R21EB019646]
  2. National Cancer Institute [R01CA186193, U01CA174706]
  3. American Cancer Society [RSG-18-006-01-CCE]
  4. Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas [RR160005]

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Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), a rare form of breast cancer associated with increased angiogenesis and metastasis, is largely driven by tumor-stromal interactions with the vasculature and the extracellular matrix (ECM). However, there is currently a lack of understanding of the role these interactions play in initiation and progression of the disease. In this study, we developed the first three-dimensional, in vitro, vascularized, microfluidic IBC platform to quantify the spatial and temporal dynamics of tumor-vasculature and tumor-ECM interactions specific to IBC. Platforms consisting of collagen type 1 ECM with an endothelialized blood vessel were cultured with IBC cells, MDA-IBC3 (HER2+) or SUM149 (triple negative), and for comparison to non-IBC cells, MDA-MB-231 (triple negative). Acellular collagen platforms with endothelialized blood vessels served as controls. SUM149 and MDA-MB-231 platforms exhibited a significantly (p < .05) higher vessel permeability and decreased endothelial coverage of the vessel lumen compared to the control. Both IBC platforms, MDA-IBC3 and SUM149, expressed higher levels of vascular endothelial growth factor (p < .05) and increased collagen ECM porosity compared to non-IBCMDA-MB-231 (p < .05) and control (p < .01) platforms. Additionally, unique to the MDA-IBC3 platform, we observed progressive sprouting of the endothelium over time resulting in viable vessels with lumen. The newly sprouted vessels encircled clusters of MDA-IBC3 cells replicating a key feature of in vivo IBC. The IBC in vitro vascularized platforms introduced in this study model well-described in vivo and clinical IBC phenotypes and provide an adaptable, high throughput tool for systematically and quantitatively investigating tumor-stromal mechanisms and dynamics of tumor progression.

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