Anticancer drug discovery has been hampered by the lack of reliable preclinical models, which routinely use cells grown in two-dimensional (2D) culture systems. However, many of the characteristics of cells in 2D culture do not translate into the findings in animal xenografts. Three-dimensional (3D) growth may be responsible for some of these changes, and models using cells grown in 3D may form a more representative step in tumouricidal validation prior to animal implantation and human testing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe induction of angiogenesis and the promotion of tumor growth and invasiveness are processes critical to metastasis, and are dependent on reciprocal interactions between tumor cells and their microenvironment. The formation of a clinically relevant tumor requires support from the surrounding stroma, and it is hypothesized that three-dimensional (3D) tumor coculture models offer a microenvironment that more closely resembles the physiological tumor microenvironment. In this study, we investigated the effects of tissue-engineered 3D architecture and tumor-stroma interaction on the angiogenic factor secretion profiles of U2OS osteosarcoma cells by coculturing the tumor cells with immortalized fibroblasts or human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs).
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