JOURNAL ARTICLE

Spatial organization of three‐dimensional cocultures of adriamycin‐sensitive and ‐resistant human breast cancer MCF‐7 cells

Abstract

Abstract Genetic and cellular heterogeneity is one of mechanisms involved in increasing tumour aggressiveness during neoplastic progression. Development of drug‐resistant tumour cell subpopulations is a major problem in clinical oncology. Multi‐drug resistant tumour cells survive when exposed to cytotoxic agents. Here, we studied in a three‐dimensional (3D) coculture system, called “ex vivo nodules”, how drug‐resistant and sensitive tumour cells settle down in a 3D space. For this, we cocultured adriamycin‐sensitive (MCF‐7S) and ‐resistant (MCF‐7R) human breast cancer cells in long term nodules. We showed that both types of cells are able to grow separately or in coculture until five weeks in spheroidal forms. MCF‐7R cells did not loose their multi‐drug resistance when cultured in nodules as measured by RT‐PCR. Curiously, the exterior aspects of mixed (MCF‐7S/ MCF‐7R) nodules and MCF‐7R nodules were similar whereas MCF‐7S nodules were completely different. Nevertheless, morphologically these three nodule types were distinct, in particular in their density. Immunostaining showed that in mixed nodules, MCF‐7R cells were arranged at the periphery, whereas the MCF‐7S cells are in the central part of the nodules. Even if the mechanism of this arrangement remained unclear, this work shows that three‐dimensional cell culture is well adapted to the study of the relationships between adhesion mechanisms and drug‐resistance.

Keywords:
MCF-7 Biology Immunostaining Nodule (geology) Cancer cell Cancer research Cell culture Cancer Drug resistance Cytotoxic T cell Cell Pathology In vitro Cell biology Human breast Immunology Immunohistochemistry Genetics

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15
Cited By
0.63
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
33
Refs
0.64
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Citation History

Topics

Cancer Cells and Metastasis
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Oncology
HER2/EGFR in Cancer Research
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Oncology
3D Printing in Biomedical Research
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
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