Improvements in the clinical outcome of osteosarcoma have plateaued in recent decades with poor translation between preclinical testing and clinical efficacy. Organotypic cultures retain key features of patient tumours, such as a myriad of cell types organized within an extracellular matrix, thereby presenting a more realistic and personalised screening of chemotherapeutic agents ex vivo. To test this concept for the first time in osteosarcoma, murine and canine osteosarcoma organotypic models were maintained for up to 21 days and in-depth analysis identified proportions of immune and stromal cells present at levels comparable to that reported in vivo in the literature. Cytotoxicity testing of a range of chemotherapeutic drugs (mafosfamide, cisplatin, methotrexate, etoposide, and doxorubicin) on murine organotypic culture ex vivo found limited response to treatment, with immune and stromal cells demonstrating enhanced survival over the global tumour cell population. Furthermore, significantly decreased sensitivity to a range of chemotherapeutics in 3D organotypic culture relative to 2D monolayer was observed, with subsequent investigation confirming reduced sensitivity in 3D than in 2D, even at equivalent levels of drug uptake. Finally, as proof of concept for the application of this model to personalised drug screening, chemotherapy testing with doxorubicin was performed on biopsies obtained from canine osteosarcoma patients. Together, this study highlights the importance of recapitulating the 3D tumour multicellular microenvironment to better predict drug response and provides evidence for the utility and possibilities of organotypic culture for enhanced preclinical selection and evaluation of chemotherapeutics targeting osteosarcoma.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13194890 | DOI Listing |
Alzheimers Dement
December 2024
Janssen Research & Development, A Division of Janssen Pharmaceutica, Beerse, Belgium, Beerse, Belgium.
Background: Microglial cells have emerged as key players in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). They act as a first line defense and fulfil a crucial role during brain development and circuit homeostasis. Microglia are involved in the removal of debris, control neural activity, regulate synaptic plasticity, and synapse pruning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
Centre for Discovery Brain Sciences at the University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom.
Background: Maintaining synaptic health is essential for normal neurological function, yet neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's disease and Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) exhibit synaptic loss. In these conditions, synaptic loss precedes neuronal degeneration, and the degree of synaptic loss correlates closely with the severity of clinical symptoms. Both Aβ, which accumulates in amyloid plaques in AD, and tau protein which accumulates intracellularly in tauopathies, including AD and PSP, accumulate within synaptic terminals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlzheimers Dement
December 2024
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Background: Calcineurin, a protein involved in functions such as synaptic plasticity and neuronal survival, plays an important role in the pathophysiology of Alzheimer's disease. This study, randomized, investigated the effects of FK506 (FK), a calcineurin inhibitor, on the behavioral, histological, and biochemical alterations observed in models of neurotoxicity induced by NMDA or Aβ and in a transgenic model for AD, in addition to the organotypic culture model stimulated with NMDA.
Methods: This study involved models for AD to experiment injecting NMDA or Aβ1-42 into the hippocampus of male C57Bl/6 mice aged 8-12 weeks to induce a neurotoxicity model, treating double-transgenic APP/PS1 mice, expressing both mouse/human APP and mutant human PS1, with chronic FK506 for AD, in which, to enable NMDA or Aβ1-42 microinjections, another experiment including a stereotaxic surgery was performed on the C57Bl/6 mice.
ALTEX
December 2024
Division of Applied Regulatory Science (DARS), Office of Clinical Pharmacology, Office of Translational Sciences, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Silver Spring, MD, USA.
Microphysiological systems (MPS) are complex in vitro tools that incorporate cells derived from various healthy or disease-state human or animal tissues and organs. While MPS have limitations, including a lack of globally harmonized guidelines for standardization, they have already proven impactful in certain areas of drug development. Further research and regulatory acceptance of MPS will contribute to making them even more effective tools in the future.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Somatostatin analogs (SSAs) binding to and activating somatostatin receptors (SSTRs) have been extensively used for the treatment of neuroendocrine tumors (NETs). The currently approved synthetic SSAs have high affinity for SSTR2 (octreotide/lanreotide), or for SSTR2 and SSTR5 (pasireotide). These agents have shown symptoms control and antiproliferative effects in subsets of NET patients and this was associated to the expression of the targeted SSTRs.
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