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Neutrally charged self-assembling peptide hydrogel recapitulates in vitro mechanisms of breast cancer progression

Helen C. Clough, Marie O’Brien, Xinyi Zhu, Aline F. Miller, Alberto Saiani, Olga Tsigkou

2021Materials Science and Engineering C28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Self-assembling peptide hydrogels (SAPH) are a popular biomaterial due to their biocompatibility with a wide range of cell types, synthetic design, structural properties that provide a more accurate 3D microenvironment, and potential for cell- and/or drug-delivery system. Mimicking solid tumors in vitro using hydrogels is one method of testing anti-cancer drug efficacy and observing cancerous cell-ECM interactions within a 3D system. In this study, a SAPH, PeptiGel®Alpha1, was used to model in vitro the 3D breast tumor microenvironment. PeptiGel®Alpha1 is composed of entangled nanofibers with consistent diameter and mechanical properties similar to breast cancer that more accurately mimic the stiffness of breast tumor tissue than Matrigel® or collagen type I. PeptiGel®Alpha1 supported the viability and growth of the breast cancer cell lines MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 and recapitulated key features of solid tumors such as hypoxia and invasion. MCF-7 cells in the hydrogels formed large spheroids resembling acini, while MDA-MB-231 remained dispersed. When treated with tamoxifen, PeptiGel®Alpha1 acted as a barrier, providing drug penetration geometry similar to that in vivo, providing better prediction of the drug effect. Finally, it was observed that MCF-7 cells engulfed the peptide matrix after 14 days, highlighting a potential use in drug delivery. PeptiGel®Alpha1 is a suitable platform for in vitro modeling of breast cancer.

Topics & Concepts

Self-healing hydrogelsTumor microenvironmentDrug deliveryBreast cancerMatrigelChemistry3D cell cultureIn vitroCancer cellIn vivoBiocompatibilityBiomedical engineeringCancer researchBiophysicsCancerNanotechnologyMaterials scienceMedicineBiologyBiochemistryInternal medicineTumor cellsBiotechnologyOrganic chemistrySupramolecular Self-Assembly in MaterialsGlycosylation and Glycoproteins ResearchProteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans research
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