Automated tracking of tumor-stroma morphology in microtissues identifies functional targets within the tumor microenvironment for therapeutic intervention
Author(s) -
Malin Åkerfelt,
Neslihan Bayramog̃lu,
Sean M. Robinson,
Mervi Toriseva,
Hannu-Pekka Schukov,
Ville Härmä,
Johannes Virtanen,
Raija Sormunen,
Mika Kaakinen,
Juho Kannala,
Lauri Eklund,
Janne Heikkilä,
Matthias Nees
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
oncotarget
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.373
H-Index - 127
ISSN - 1949-2553
DOI - 10.18632/oncotarget.5046
Subject(s) - tumor microenvironment , cancer associated fibroblasts , extracellular matrix , cancer research , paracrine signalling , stroma , tumor progression , fibroblast , cancer cell , stromal cell , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , prostate cancer , cancer , cell culture , pathology , medicine , immunology , tumor cells , receptor , biochemistry , genetics , immunohistochemistry
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) constitute an important part of the tumor microenvironment and promote invasion via paracrine functions and physical impact on the tumor. Although the importance of including CAFs into three-dimensional (3D) cell cultures has been acknowledged, computational support for quantitative live-cell measurements of complex cell cultures has been lacking. Here, we have developed a novel automated pipeline to model tumor-stroma interplay, track motility and quantify morphological changes of 3D co-cultures, in real-time live-cell settings. The platform consists of microtissues from prostate cancer cells, combined with CAFs in extracellular matrix that allows biochemical perturbation. Tracking of fibroblast dynamics revealed that CAFs guided the way for tumor cells to invade and increased the growth and invasiveness of tumor organoids. We utilized the platform to determine the efficacy of inhibitors in prostate cancer and the associated tumor microenvironment as a functional unit. Interestingly, certain inhibitors selectively disrupted tumor-CAF interactions, e.g. focal adhesion kinase (FAK) inhibitors specifically blocked tumor growth and invasion concurrently with fibroblast spreading and motility. This complex phenotype was not detected in other standard in vitro models. These results highlight the advantage of our approach, which recapitulates tumor histology and can significantly improve cancer target validation in vitro.
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