Publications by authors named "Roswitha Davtalab"

Article Synopsis
  • Metastatic models are anticipated to revolutionize preclinical screening for small-molecule drugs and biologics by creating more realistic testing environments that replicate 3D metastatic diseases.
  • The study developed a 3D β-tricalcium phosphate (β-TCP) model for neuroblastoma bone metastasis, using advanced printing techniques to encourage cell growth in a supportive network, which was monitored using two-photon microscopy.
  • Results showed that conventional chemotherapies required higher doses in 3D cultures to achieve the desired effects on tumor cells, emphasizing the necessity of 3D environments for accurate drug efficacy assessments and establishing β-TCP scaffolds as valuable tools in early drug discovery.
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Metastasis of tumor cells in the bone marrow (BM) is a multi-step and highly dynamic process during which cells succumb important phenotypic changes. Behavior of disseminated tumor cells in BM is strictly regulated by three-dimensional (3D) cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions. In this study, we explored whether the β-tricalcium-phosphate (β-TCP) scaffolds with a tailored interconnecting channel structure could enable appropriate 3D mimetic BM microenvironment for the growth of metastatic neuroblastoma cells.

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A wide variety of titanium implant modifications have been developed to improve tissue- or cell-material interactions including bone bonding, implant failure, and contact osteogenesis. Osteogenesis can be stimulated by mechanobiological signals such as topography though translation of in vivo reactions to in vitro bioactivity and stem cell culture data, and vice versa, is challenging. We hypothesized that a systematic in vitro approach comparing clinically well-accepted implant surface topographical modifications could shed light on potential cell biological mechanisms provoked by submicron-, micron- or macrostructured surfaces.

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Topographical features on the nanometer scale are known to influence cellular behavior. The response of specific cell types to various types of surface structures is currently still being investigated. Alumina ceramics play an important role as biomaterials, e.

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