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A high-throughput imaging platform to characterize extracellular pH in organotypic three-dimensional in vitro models of liver cancer.

Lynn Jeanette SavicIsabel Theresa SchobertCharlie Alexander HammLucas Christoph AdamFahmeed HyderDaniel Coman
Published in: NMR in biomedicine (2020)
Given the extraordinary nature of tumor metabolism in hepatocellular carcinoma and its impact on oncologic treatment response, this study introduces a novel high-throughput extracellular pH (pHe ) mapping platform using magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging in a three-dimensional (3D) in vitro model of liver cancer. pHe mapping was performed using biosensor imaging of redundant deviation in shifts (BIRDS) on 9.4 T and 11.7 T MR scanners for validation purposes. 3D cultures of four liver cancer (HepG2, Huh7, SNU475, VX2) and one hepatocyte (THLE2) cell line were simultaneously analyzed (a) without treatment, (b) supplemented with 4.5 g/L d-glucose, and (c) treated with anti-glycolytic 3-bromopyruvate (6.25, 25, 50, 75, and 100 μM). The MR results were correlated with immunohistochemistry (GLUT-1, LAMP-2) and luminescence-based viability assays. Statistics included the unpaired t-test and ANOVA test. High-throughput pHe imaging with BIRDS for in vitro 3D liver cancer models proved feasible. Compared with non-tumorous hepatocytes (pHe = 7.1 ± 0.1), acidic pHe was revealed in liver cancer (VX2, pHe = 6.7 ± 0.1; HuH7, pHe = 6.8 ± 0.1; HepG2, pHe = 6.9 ± 0.1; SNU475, pHe = 6.9 ± 0.1), in agreement with GLUT-1 upregulation. Glucose addition significantly further decreased pHe in hyperglycolytic cell lines (VX2, HepG2, and Huh7, by 0.28, 0.06, and 0.11, respectively, all p < 0.001), whereas 3-bromopyruvate normalized tumor pHe in a dose-dependent manner without affecting viability. In summary, this study introduces a non-invasive pHe imaging platform for high-yield screening using a translational 3D liver cancer model, which may help reveal and target mechanisms of therapy resistance and inform personalized treatment of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma.
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