4.4 Article

Microfluidic Co-Culture Models for Dissecting the Immune Response in in vitro Tumor Microenvironments

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 170, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/61895

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Fondazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (AIRC) [18418]
  2. Ministero Italiano della Salute [RF_GR-2013-02357273]
  3. Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC) [21366]

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Cutting-edge tools for complex disease models need to provide physiologically and pathologically relevant insights to understand invisible processes. Advanced cell assays mimicking in vivo scenery are crucial for visualizing and measuring tumor-host interactions. These methods can simulate the complexity of tumor microenvironments and hold great potential for personalized oncology.
Complex disease models demand cutting-edge tools able to deliver physiologically and pathologically relevant, actionable insights, and unveil otherwise invisible processes. Advanced cell assays closely mimicking in vivo scenery are establishing themselves as novel ways to visualize and measure the bidirectional tumor-host interplay influencing the progression of cancer. Here we describe two versatile protocols to recreate highly controllable 2D and 3D co-cultures in microdevices, mimicking the complexity of the tumor microenvironment (TME), under natural and therapy-induced immunosurveillance. In section 1, an experimental setting is provided to monitor crosstalk between adherent tumor cells and floating immune populations, by bright field time-lapse microscopy. As an applicative scenario, we analyze the effects of anti-cancer treatments, such as the so-called immunogenic cancer cell death inducers on the recruitment and activation of immune cells. In section 2, 3D tumor-immune microenvironments are assembled in a competitive layout. Differential immune infiltration is monitored by fluorescence snapshots up to 72 h, to evaluate combination therapeutic strategies. In both settings, image processing steps are illustrated to extract a plethora of immune cell parameters (e.g., immune cell migration and interaction, response to therapeutic agents). These simple and powerful methods can be further tailored to simulate the complexity of the TME encompassing the heterogeneity and plasticity of cancer, stromal and immune cells subtypes, as well as their reciprocal interactions as drivers of cancer evolution. The compliance of these rapidly evolving technologies with live-cell high-content imaging can lead to the generation of large informative datasets, bringing forth new challenges. Indeed, the triangle ''co-cultures/microscopy/advanced data analysis sets the path towards a precise problem parametrization that may assist tailor-made therapeutic protocols. We expect that future integration of cancer-immune on-a-chip with artificial intelligence for high-throughput processing will synergize a large step forward in leveraging the capabilities as predictive and preclinical tools for precision and personalized oncology.

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