Cancer Spheroids Embedded in Tissue-Engineered Skin Substitutes: A New Method to Study Tumorigenicity In Vivo.
Martin A BarbierKarel FerlandHenri De KoninckEmilie J DoucetLudivine DubourgetMinJoon KimBettina CattierAmélie MorissetteMbarka BchetniaDanielle LaroucheDong Hyun KimGuillaume St-JeanLucie GermainPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2024)
Tumorigenic assays are used during a clinical translation to detect the transformation potential of cell-based therapies. One of these in vivo assays is based on the separate injection of each cell type to be used in the clinical trial. However, the injection method requires many animals and several months to obtain useful results. In previous studies, we showed the potential of tissue-engineered skin substitutes (TESs) as a model for normal skin in which cancer cells can be included in vitro. Herein, we showed a new method to study tumorigenicity, using cancer spheroids that were embedded in TESs (cTES) and grafted onto athymic mice, and compared it with the commonly used cell injection assay. Tumors developed in both models, cancer cell injection and cTES grafting, but metastases were not detected at the time of sacrifice. Interestingly, the rate of tumor development was faster in cTESs than with the injection method. In conclusion, grafting TESs is a sensitive method to detect tumor cell growth with and could be developed as an alternative test for tumorigenicity.
Keyphrases
- ultrasound guided
- clinical trial
- high throughput
- papillary thyroid
- single cell
- soft tissue
- cell therapy
- squamous cell
- stem cells
- type diabetes
- randomized controlled trial
- metabolic syndrome
- bone marrow
- risk assessment
- open label
- squamous cell carcinoma
- insulin resistance
- climate change
- human health
- lymph node metastasis
- phase ii
- case control