Litcius/Paper detail

U-Shape Pillar Strip for 3D Cell-Lumped Organoid Model (3D-COM) Mimicking Lung Cancer Hypoxia Conditions in High-Throughput Screening (HTS)

Sang‐Yun Lee, Eunyoung Lee, Jeong Uk Lim, Bosung Ku, Yu-Jeong Seong, Ji-O Ryu, Hyeong Jun Cho, Kyuhwan Kim, Yongki Hwang, Seok Whan Moon, Mi Hyoung Moon, Kyung Soo Kim, Kwanyong Hyun, Tae Jung Kim, Yeoun Eun Sung, Joon Young Choi, Chan Kwon Park, Sung Won Kim, Sung Won Kim, Chang Dong Yeo, Seung Joon Kim, Seung Joon Kim, Dong Woo Lee

2024Analytical Chemistry10 citationsDOI

Abstract

Hypoxia is a representative tumor characteristic associated with malignant progression in clinical patients. Engineered in vitro models have led to significant advances in cancer research, allowing for the investigation of cells in physiological environments and the study of disease mechanisms and processes with enhanced relevance. In this study, we propose a U-shape pillar strip for a 3D cell-lumped organoid model (3D-COM) to study the effects of hypoxia on lung cancer in a high-throughput manner. We developed a U-pillar strip that facilitates the aggregation of PDCs mixed with an extracellular matrix to make the 3D-COM in 384-plate array form. The response to three hypoxia-activated prodrugs was higher in the 3D-COM than in the 2D culture model. The protein expression of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 alpha (HIF-1α) and HIF-2α, which are markers of hypoxia, was also higher in the 3D-COM than in the 2D culture. The results show that 3D-COM better recapitulated the hypoxic conditions of lung cancer tumors than the 2D culture. Therefore, the U-shape pillar strip for 3D-COM is a good tool to study the effects of hypoxia on lung cancer in a high-throughput manner, which can efficiently develop new drugs targeting hypoxic tumors.

Topics & Concepts

Hypoxia (environmental)PillarChemistryOrganoidLung cancer3D cell cultureCancer cellCancer researchCell cultureHypoxia-inducible factorsExtracellular matrixCell biologyCancerCellBiomedical engineeringPathologyBiologyInternal medicineMedicineBiochemistryOxygenGeneOrganic chemistryEngineeringStructural engineeringGeneticsCancer, Hypoxia, and MetabolismCancer Cells and Metastasis3D Printing in Biomedical Research