Droplet Microfluidics-Based Fabrication of Monodisperse Poly(ethylene glycol)-Fibrinogen Breast Cancer Microspheres for Automated Drug Screening Applications

  • Wen J. Seeto
  • , Yuan Tian
  • , Shantanu Pradhan
  • , Dmitriy Minond
  • , Elizabeth A. Lipke

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Spheroidal cancer microtissues are highly advantageous for a wide range of biomedical applications, including high-throughput drug screening, multiplexed target validation, mechanistic investigation of tumor-extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions, among others. Current techniques for spheroidal tissue formation rely heavily on self-aggregation of single cancer cells and have substantial limitations in terms of cell-type-specific heterogeneities, uniformity, ease of production and handling, and most importantly, mimicking the complex native tumor microenvironmental conditions in simplistic models. These constraints can be overcome by using engineered tunable hydrogels that closely mimic the tumor ECM and elucidate pathologically relevant cell behavior, coupled with microfluidics-based high-throughput fabrication technologies to encapsulate cells and create cancer microtissues. In this study, we employ biosynthetic hybrid hydrogels composed of poly(ethylene glycol diacrylate) (PEGDA) covalently conjugated to natural protein (fibrinogen) (PEG-fibrinogen, PF) to create monodisperse microspheres encapsulating breast cancer cells for 3D culture and tumorigenic characterization. A previously developed droplet-based microfluidic system is used for rapid, facile, and reproducible fabrication of uniform cancer microspheres with either MCF7 or MDA-MB-231 (metastatic) breast cancer cells. Cancer cell-type-dependent variations in cell viability, metabolic activity, and 3D morphology, as well as microsphere stiffness, are quantified over time. Particularly, MCF7 cells grew as tight cellular clusters in the PF microspheres, characteristic of their epithelial morphology, while MDA-MB-231 cells displayed elongated and invasive morphology, characteristic of their mesenchymal and metastatic nature. Finally, the translational potential of the cancer microsphere platform toward high-throughput drug screening is also demonstrated. With high uniformity, scalability, and control over engineered microenvironments, the established cancer microsphere model can be potentially used for mechanistic studies, fabrication of modular cancer microtissues, and future drug-testing applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3831-3841
Number of pages11
JournalACS Biomaterials Science and Engineering
Volume8
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 12 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.

Funding

This work was supported by the Auburn University Research Initiative in Cancer (AURIC) Graduate Fellowship (S.P.), AU-CMB/NSF EPSCoR NSF-EPS-1158862 summer research fellowship (W.J.S.), Alabama EPSCoR Graduate Research Scholarship Program (Y.T.), National Science Foundation NSF-CBET-1743445 (Y.T. and E.A.L.), and NIH grant R15CA249788 (D.M.).

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Biomaterials
  • Biomedical Engineering

Keywords

  • biomaterials
  • breast cancer
  • drug testing
  • microfluidics
  • tissue engineering
  • tumor modeling

Disciplines

  • Biomaterials

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