4 research outputs found
Sliced Magnetic Polyacrylamide Hydrogel with Cell-Adhesive Microarray Interface: A Novel Multicellular Spheroid Culturing Platform
Cell-adhesive
properties are of great significance to materials serving as extracellular
matrix mimics. Appropriate cell-adhesive property of material interface
can balance the cell–matrix interaction and cell–cell
interaction and can promote cells to form 3D structures. Herein, a
novel magnetic polyacrylamide (PAM) hydrogel fabricated via combining
magnetostatic field induced magnetic nanoparticles assembly and hydrogel
gelation was applied as a multicellular spheroids culturing platform.
When cultured on the cell-adhesive microarray interface of sliced
magnetic hydrogel, normal and tumor cells from different cell lines
could rapidly form multicellular spheroids spontaneously. Furthermore,
cells which could only form loose cell aggregates in a classic 3D
cell culture model (such as hanging drop system) were able to be promoted
to form multicellular spheroids on this platform. In the light of
its simplicity in fabricating as well as its effectiveness in promoting
formation of multicellular spheroids which was considered as a prevailing
tool in the study of the microenvironmental regulation of tumor cell
physiology and therapeutic problems, this composite material holds
promise in anticancer drugs or hyperthermia therapy evaluation in
vitro in the future
Sliced Magnetic Polyacrylamide Hydrogel with Cell-Adhesive Microarray Interface: A Novel Multicellular Spheroid Culturing Platform
Cell-adhesive
properties are of great significance to materials serving as extracellular
matrix mimics. Appropriate cell-adhesive property of material interface
can balance the cell–matrix interaction and cell–cell
interaction and can promote cells to form 3D structures. Herein, a
novel magnetic polyacrylamide (PAM) hydrogel fabricated via combining
magnetostatic field induced magnetic nanoparticles assembly and hydrogel
gelation was applied as a multicellular spheroids culturing platform.
When cultured on the cell-adhesive microarray interface of sliced
magnetic hydrogel, normal and tumor cells from different cell lines
could rapidly form multicellular spheroids spontaneously. Furthermore,
cells which could only form loose cell aggregates in a classic 3D
cell culture model (such as hanging drop system) were able to be promoted
to form multicellular spheroids on this platform. In the light of
its simplicity in fabricating as well as its effectiveness in promoting
formation of multicellular spheroids which was considered as a prevailing
tool in the study of the microenvironmental regulation of tumor cell
physiology and therapeutic problems, this composite material holds
promise in anticancer drugs or hyperthermia therapy evaluation in
vitro in the future