Tissue Engineered Models of Brain Tumors and Their Applications
85
icon wafer with an altered strip width and complex design provided important
insights on cell adhesion and migration [132]. U251 cells on STEP fibers and
C6 cells on laminin coated linear grooves have serviced to exercise the impact
of geometry on the migration speed and dimensions, and cytoskeletal model-
ing [133, 134]. Aside from the role of topographic information on migration
and mechanisms behind, it can still be applied to proliferation, invasion, and
investigation of driving factors of gene expresssion pattern [135, 136].
3.3.3
3D Models
After 2.5D models, 3D models gained popularity as versatile tools to address
the bottlenecks of conventional 2D models on the simulation of the GBM com-
plexity. Currently, 3D models are formulated as scaffold-free, scaffold-based,
and hybrid strategies. Additionally, microfluidic/chip systems and organotypic
slices are of current interest, especially to harness native tumor tissue prop-
erties.
Scaffold-free models (Figure 3.3 and Table 3.1) in GBM are constructed
as organizations of (hetero)spheroids and organoids. During this process, cell-
cell cohesion is amplified by driving minimum interaction with any non-cell
surface. Thereby, it leads to spontaneous cell arrangements in 3D configu-
rations. This assembly is considered superior over 2D monolayer culture, as
it can imitate various features of solid tumors. Even certain aspects of the
animal models of the disease cannot match the development stages of hu-
mans where patient-derived organoids can be preferable to model disease
and even to discover patient-specific responses. The possibility of real-time
imaging, biobanking and high-throughput analysis are other benefits of these
technologies [137–139]. Besides, in vitro culture creates development of three
distinct zones (proliferative, quiescent and necrotic zones) within especially
spheroids with larger than 500 µm in diameter. Non-uniform features of pH,
gases, nutrients, and other soluble factors are further posed by 3D organiza-
tion of spheroids with high similarity to native tumor [140]. An organoid is
also 3D assembly of cells, but it is composed of different cell types mimick-
ing the cellular composition, function and physiology of the tissue/organ they
originate, as well as better imitate genetics and phenotype of tumor tissue.
Conversely, they require growth factor cocktails to sustain tissue architecture
and, tissue procurement and processing alterations hamper standardization
[122, 123, 141].
In hanging drop (Figure 3.3A), 20–40 µl drops of cell suspension stay on
the lid by surface tension and, gravity leads to aggregation and compaction of
cells into spheroids. This technique is relatively simple, cost-effective, provides
control over spheroid size and content, but it is labor-intensive, challenging in
scale-up and traditionally does not support the addition of a fresh medium or
soluble factors during the incubation period [122, 142, 143]. 384 well-hanging
drop arrays can overcome these major drawbacks, as they allow time-lapse
imaging, on-site staining and drug treatment, and culture of distinct types