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Cancer Cell Invasion of Mammary Organoids with Basal-In Phenotype.

Advanced healthcare materials (2020-06-26)
Eric Parigoris, Soojung Lee, David Mertz, Madeleine Turner, Amy Y Liu, Jason Sentosa, Sabra Djomehri, Hao Chen Chang, Kathryn Luker, Gary Luker, Celina G Kleer, Shuichi Takayama
RESUMEN

This paper describes mammary organoids with a basal-in phenotype where the basement membrane is located on the interior surface of the organoid. A key materials consideration to induce this basal-in phenotype is the use of a minimal gel scaffold that the epithelial cells self-assemble around and encapsulate. When MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells are co-cultured with epithelial cells from day 0 under these conditions, cells self-organize into patterns with distinct cancer cell populations both inside and at the periphery of the epithelial organoid. In another type of experiment, the robust formation of the basement membrane on the epithelial organoid interior enables convenient studies of MDA-MB-231 invasion in a tumor progression-relevant direction relative to epithelial cell-basement membrane positioning. That is, the study of cancer invasion through the epithelium first, followed by the basement membrane to the basal side, is realized in an experimentally convenient manner where the cancer cells are simply seeded on the outside of preformed organoids, and their invasion into the organoid is monitored. Interestingly, invasion is more prominent when tumor cells are added to day 7 organoids with less developed basement membranes compared to day 16 organoids with more defined ones.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Triton X-100, laboratory grade
Sigma-Aldrich
Poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(propylene glycol)-block-poly(ethylene glycol), average Mn ~14,600
Sigma-Aldrich
Hexadimethrine bromide, ≥95%