Stromal cells regulate malignant B-cell spatial organization, survival, and drug response in a new 3D model mimicking lymphoma tumor niche

2020 
Non-Hodgkin B-cell lymphomas (B-NHL) mainly develop within lymph nodes as densely packed aggregates of tumor cells and their surrounding microenvironment, creating a tumor niche specific to each lymphoma subtypes. Until now, in vitro preclinical models mimicking biomechanical forces, cellular microenvironment, and 3D organization of B lymphomas remain scarce while all these parameters constitute key determinants of lymphomagenesis and drug resistance. Using a microfluidic method based on the encapsulation of cells inside permeable, elastic, and hollow alginate microspheres, we developed a new tunable 3D-model incorporating extracellular matrix and/or stromal cells. Lymphoma B cells and stromal cells dynamically formed self-organized 3D spheroids, thus initiating a coevolution of these two cell types, reflecting their bidirectional crosstalk, and recapitulating the heterogeneity of B-NHL subtypes. In addition, this approach makes it suitable to assess in a relevant in vitro model the activity of new therapeutic agents in B-NHL.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    58
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []