4.7 Article

Matrix Stiffness-Regulated Growth of Breast Tumo Spheroids and Their Response to Chemotherapy

Journal

BIOMACROMOLECULES
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages 419-429

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.0c01287

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Young Thousand Talents Program
  2. National Science Foundation of China [21972054]
  3. Program of Assembly And Functionalities for Supramolecular Systems 2.0 [BP0618011]
  4. JLU Science and Technology Innovative Research Team of the Jilin University [2017TD-06]
  5. NSERC Canada
  6. NSERC Alexander Graham Bell Canada Graduate Scholarships (CGSD) program
  7. Connaught International Scholarship for Doctoral students
  8. NSERC CREATE Training Program in Organ-on-a-Chip Engineering and Entrepreneurship

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By independently altering the stiffness of hydrogel matrix, researchers were able to influence the response of breast cancer spheroids to chemotherapy, with soft hydrogels promoting larger spheroid growth and enhancing drug resistance.
Interactions between tumor cells and the extracellular matrix (ECM) are an important factor contributing to therapy failure in cancer patients. Current in vitro breast cancer spheroid models examining the role of mechanical properties on spheroid response to chemotherapy are limited by the use of two-dimensional cell culture, as well as simultaneous variation in hydrogel matrix stiffness and other properties, e.g., hydrogel composition, pore size, and cell adhesion ligand density. In addition, currently used hydrogel matrices do not replicate the filamentous ECM architecture in a breast tumor microenvironment. Here, we report a collagen-alginate hydrogel with a filamentous architecture and a 20-fold variation in stiffness, achieved independently of other properties, used for the evaluation of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer spheroid response to doxorubicin. The variation in hydrogel mechanical properties was achieved by altering the degree of cross-linking of alginate molecules. We show that soft hydrogels promote the growth of larger MCF-7 tumor spheroids with a lower fraction of proliferating cells and enhance spheroid resistance to doxorubicin. Notably, the stiffness-dependent chemotherapeutic response of the spheroids was temporally mediated: it became apparent at sufficiently long cell culture times, when the matrix stiffness has influenced the spheroid growth. These findings highlight the significance of decoupling matrix stiffness from other characteristics in studies of chemotherapeutic resistance of tumor spheroids and in development of drug screening platforms.

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