High-throughput analysis of cell-cell crosstalk in ad hoc designed microfluidic chips for oncoimmunology applications

Understanding the interactions between immune and cancer cells occurring within the tumor microenvironment is a prerequisite for successful and personalized anti-cancer therapies. Microfluidic devices, coupled to advanced microscopy systems and automated analytical tools, can represent an innovative...

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Veröffentlicht in:Methods in enzymology 2020, Vol.632, p.479
Hauptverfasser: Mencattini, Arianna, De Ninno, Adele, Mancini, Jacopo, Businaro, Luca, Martinelli, Eugenio, Schiavoni, Giovanna, Mattei, Fabrizio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding the interactions between immune and cancer cells occurring within the tumor microenvironment is a prerequisite for successful and personalized anti-cancer therapies. Microfluidic devices, coupled to advanced microscopy systems and automated analytical tools, can represent an innovative approach for high-throughput investigations on immune cell-cancer interactions. In order to study such interactions and to evaluate how therapeutic agents can affect this crosstalk, we employed two ad hoc fabricated microfluidic platforms reproducing advanced 2D or 3D tumor immune microenvironments. In the first type of chip, we confronted the capacity of tumor cells embedded in Matrigel containing one drug or Matrigel containing a combination of two drugs to attract differentially immune cells, by fluorescence microscopy analyses. In the second chip, we investigated the migratory/interaction response of naïve immune cells to danger signals emanated from tumor cells treated with an immunogenic drug, by time-lapse microscopy and automated tracking analysis. We demonstrate that microfluidic platforms and their associated high-throughput computed analyses can represent versatile and smart systems to: (i) monitor and quantify the recruitment and interactions of the immune cells with cancer in a controlled environment, (ii) evaluate the immunogenic effects of anti-cancer therapeutic agents and (iii) evaluate the immunogenic efficacy of combinatorial regimens with respect to single agents.
ISSN:1557-7988
DOI:10.1016/bs.mie.2019.06.012