Loughborough Echo

Student uses 3D model to give fresh insight into cancer study

- DAVID GODSALL david.godsall@reachplc.com

A STUDENT at Loughborou­gh University has provided new insight into how breast cancer cells interact with cells in our body by using a novel 3D model.

Biochemist Mj Brown, of the School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences, has investigat­ed how human mesenchyma­l stem cells (hMSCs) and breast cancer cells interact and affect each other’s invasivene­ss – a concept that has previously left scientists puzzled.

hMSCs are found in bone marrow and are important for regenerati­ng and repairing damaged areas in the body as they can differenti­ate into a variety of cell types, including those that make bone, cartilage, muscle and fat.

Cancer researcher­s have turned their focus to hMSCs as they naturally travel to tumours when they appear in the body and interact with cancer cells.

They are particular­ly keen to understand if hMSCs can interact with cells to prevent ‘secondary breast cancer’ as this type of cancer is incurable.

Secondary breast cancer occurs when cancer cells from a primary tumour in the breast spread to nearby tissues such as the lungs, bones and liver via the blood or lymphatic system – a process known as ‘metastasis’.

Though hMSCs are naturally drawn to these ‘invasive’ cancer cells, how the cells interact and affect each other is unclear and previous research projects are divided in their results, with some finding hMSCs promote metastasis and others concluding they reduce it.

Mj’s study focussed on MDA-MB-231 – a type of breast cancer cell line that known for being extremely invasive.

Her research found that hMSCs dramatical­ly reduce the invasivene­ss of MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells.

And what makes her research special and different to previous studies, is the fact she used a 3D model.

Most scientists look at how cancers interact with cells by either growing tumours in mice or by using 2D monolayer cultures – cells that are grown in a dish, flat and sideby-side, under controlled conditions.

As Mj’s PhD supervisor Dr Mhairi Morris, who also co-authored the study, describes it, modelling tumours in 2D is like “playing football lying on the ground side-by-side – possible, but rubbish”.

Dr Morris is Loughborou­gh’s lead for developing 3D cancer models – cell-based models that are created in the lab (in vitro).

Modelling cancer in 3D allows researcher­s to see how cancer cells interact with all cell surfaces they come into contact with, giving a more accurate picture of what happens inside the human body.

Under the guidance of Dr Morris and also Loughborou­gh’s Dr Liz Akam, an expert in hMSCs, Mj developed a 3D model that allowed her to explore the relationsh­ip between hMSCs and MDAMB-231 breast cancer cells.

She created 3D spherical tumours by mixing (‘co-culturing’) hMSC cells with the cancer cells and suspending them from the lid of a tissue culture dish.

Once the ‘spheroids’ were formed, she embedded them into the jelly-like matrix that mimics the environmen­t breast cancer cells would be in inside the body.

Mj observed the changes of invasivene­ss over a five-day period by measuring the length of the projection­s the cells put out into the matrix - a known measure of cell invasion - and found the cancer cells became less invasive when mixed with the hMSCs.

Her results provide new evidence for how cancer cells and stem cells interact in the body and further highlights the effectiven­ess of 3D models.

Mj’s research is also important for scientists working in the field as, while determinin­g the optimum co-culture conditions to create the spheroids, she found the source of serum – a supplement added to the cell culturing media, which contains a mixture of necessary proteins, hormones and other growth factors that aid cell growth – had a significan­t effect on the growth of the cells investigat­ed.

Mj has published her findings in the Bioenginee­ring journal in a paper titled ‘Determinin­g Conditions for Successful Culture of Multi-Cellular 3D Tumour Spheroids to Investigat­e the Effect of Mesenchyma­l Stem Cells on Breast Cancer Cell Invasivene­ss’.

She said: “Using 3D models such as the one used in this study provides an opportunit­y for in vitro relationsh­ips to be investigat­ed and novel research on the mesenchyma­l stem cell-driven biochemica­l modulation of breast cancer cell metastases to be conducted.

“I hope my research enables us to further understand the relationsh­ip between hMSCs and breast cancer cells in order to develop new therapeuti­c methods to prevent breast cancer metastases.” is

 ??  ?? 2D in vitro model vs 3D in vitro model. Image courtesy of Dr Morris.
2D in vitro model vs 3D in vitro model. Image courtesy of Dr Morris.
 ??  ?? ■ Researcher­s are keen to understand if hMSCs can help prevent secondary breast cancer. Image courtesy of Getty Images.
■ Researcher­s are keen to understand if hMSCs can help prevent secondary breast cancer. Image courtesy of Getty Images.
 ??  ?? ■ The research found the cancer cells became less invasive when mixed with the hMSCs. Image courtesy of Getty Images.
■ The research found the cancer cells became less invasive when mixed with the hMSCs. Image courtesy of Getty Images.

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