Gels for Live Analysis of Compartmentalized Environments (GLAnCE): A tissue model to probe tumour phenotypes at tumour-stroma interfaces

Biomaterials. 2020 Jan:228:119572. doi: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2019.119572. Epub 2019 Oct 23.

Abstract

The interface between a tumour and the adjacent stroma is a site of great importance for tumour development. At this site, carcinoma cells are highly proliferative, undergo invasive phenotypic changes, and directly interact with surrounding stromal cells, such as cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) which further exert pro-tumorigenic effects. Here we describe the development of GLAnCE (Gels for Live Analysis of Compartmentalized Environments), an easy-to-use hydrogel-culture platform for investigating CAF-tumour cell interaction dynamics in vitro at a tumour-stroma interface. GLAnCE enables observation of CAF-mediated enhancement of both tumour cell proliferation and invasion at the tumour-stroma interface in real time, as well as stratification between phenotypes at the interface versus in the bulk tumour tissue compartment. We found that CAF presence resulted in the establishment of an invasion-permissive, interface-specific matrix environment, that leads to carcinoma cell movement outwards from the tumour edge and tumour cell invasion. Furthermore, the spatial stratification capability of GLAnCE was leveraged to discern differences between tumour cell epithelial-to-mesenchymal (EMT) transition genes induced by paracrine signalling from CAFs versus genes induced by interface-specific, CAF-mediated microenvironment. GLAnCE combines high usability and tissue complexity, to provide a powerful in vitro platform to probe mechanisms of tumour cell movement specific to the microenvironment at the tumour-stroma interface.

Keywords: CAF; EMT; Invasion; Invasion-permissive matrix; Tumour-stroma interface.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts*
  • Cell Line, Tumor
  • Cell Movement
  • Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition
  • Fibroblasts
  • Gels
  • Phenotype

Substances

  • Gels