Preparation of a User-Defined Peptide Gel for Controlled 3D Culture Models of Cancer and Disease
There is a growing awareness that cells grown in 3D better model in vivo behavior than those grown in 2D. In this protocol, we describe a simple and tunable 3D hydrogel, suitable for culturing cells and tissue in a setting that matches their native environment. This is particularly important for res...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of visualized experiments 2020-12 (166) |
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creator | Ashworth, Jennifer C Morgan, Rebecca L Lis-Slimak, Kataryna Meade, Kate A Jones, Sal Spence, Katherine Slater, Charlotte E Thompson, Jamie L Grabowska, Anna M Clarke, Robert B Farnie, Gilian Merry, Cathy L R |
description | There is a growing awareness that cells grown in 3D better model in vivo behavior than those grown in 2D. In this protocol, we describe a simple and tunable 3D hydrogel, suitable for culturing cells and tissue in a setting that matches their native environment. This is particularly important for researchers investigating the initiation, growth, and treatment of cancer where the interaction between cells and their local extracellular matrix is a fundamental part of the model. Moving to 3D culture can be challenging and is often associated with a lack of reproducibility due to high batch-to-batch variation in animal-derived 3D culture matrices. Similarly, handling issues can limit the usefulness of synthetic hydrogels. In response to this need, we have optimized a simple self-assembling peptide gel, to enable the culture of relevant cell line models of cancer and disease, as well as patient-derived tissue/cells. The gel itself is free from matrix components, apart from those added during encapsulation or deposited into the gel by the encapsulated cells. The mechanical properties of the hydrogels can also be altered independent of matrix addition. It, therefore, acts as a 'blank slate' allowing researchers to build a 3D culture environment that reflects the target tissue of interest and to dissect the influences of mechanical forces and/or biochemical control of cell behavior independently. |
doi_str_mv | 10.3791/61710 |
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The mechanical properties of the hydrogels can also be altered independent of matrix addition. 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subjects | Animals Cell Culture Techniques - methods Cell Death Cell Survival Extracellular Matrix - chemistry HCT116 Cells Humans Hydrogels - chemistry MCF-7 Cells Models, Biological Neoplasms - pathology Peptides - chemistry Rheology RNA - metabolism Staining and Labeling |
title | Preparation of a User-Defined Peptide Gel for Controlled 3D Culture Models of Cancer and Disease |
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