Three Dimensional Models of Endocrine Organs and Target Tissues Regulated by the Endocrine System.

Autor: Luca, Edlira, Zitzmann, Kathrin, Bornstein, Stefan, Kugelmeier, Patrick, Beuschlein, Felix, Nölting, Svenja, Hantel, Constanze
Předmět:
Zdroj: Cancers; Sep2023, Vol. 15 Issue 18, p4601, 27p
Abstrakt: Simple Summary: The intricate endocrine system regulates human physiology by producing and secreting various hormones. Novel methodology pertaining to spheroids and organoids is currently used to understand endocrine gland development and function, as well as to identify novel therapeutic agents to target endocrine cancers. Cells cultured in non-adherent conditions aggregate to form 3-dimentional spheres. Spheroids results from aggregates of one cell type, while multiple cells types self-organize together into organoids. Organoids are multifaceted structures that capture the intricacies of cell-cell interactions and mimic the biological complexity of organs in a dish. Additionally, patient tumor biopsies cultured as organoids can recapitulate the phenotype and genotype of the original tumors in vitro, thereby advancing therapeutic strategies for personalized medicine. In this manuscript, we will review the efforts to implement spheroids/organoids technology in basic research to answer fundamental questions in endocrine gland physiology as well as in preclinical research for cancers of endocrine organs and some of their target tissues. Immortalized cell lines originating from tumors and cultured in monolayers in vitro display consistent behavior and response, and generate reproducible results across laboratories. However, for certain endpoints, these cell lines behave quite differently from the original solid tumors. Thereby, the homogeneity of immortalized cell lines and two-dimensionality of monolayer cultures deters from the development of new therapies and translatability of results to the more complex situation in vivo. Organoids originating from tissue biopsies and spheroids from cell lines mimic the heterogeneous and multidimensional characteristics of tumor cells in 3D structures in vitro. Thus, they have the advantage of recapitulating the more complex tissue architecture of solid tumors. In this review, we discuss recent efforts in basic and preclinical cancer research to establish methods to generate organoids/spheroids and living biobanks from endocrine tissues and target organs under endocrine control while striving to achieve solutions in personalized medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index
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