Copyright
©The Author(s) 2019.
World J Stem Cells. Dec 26, 2019; 11(12): 1065-1083
Published online Dec 26, 2019. doi: 10.4252/wjsc.v11.i12.1065
Published online Dec 26, 2019. doi: 10.4252/wjsc.v11.i12.1065
Type of culture | 2D | 3D | Ref. |
In vivo-like | Do not mimic the natural structure of the tissue or tumor mass | In vivo tissues and organs are in 3D form | Takai et al[102] |
Proliferation | Tumor cells were grown in monolayer faster than in 3D spheroids | Similar to the situation in vivo | Lv et al[11] |
Polarity | Partial polarization | More accurate depiction of cell polarization | Antoni et al[18] |
Cell morphology | Sheet-like, flat, and stretched cells in monolayer | Form aggregate/spheroid structures | Breslin et al[103] |
Stiffness | High stiffness (approximately 3 × 109 Pa) | Low stiffness (> 4000 Pa) | Krausz et al[104] |
Cell-cell interaction | Limited cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions and no “niches” | In vivo-like, proper interactions of cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix, environmental “niches” are created | Lv et al[11], Kang et al[105] |
Gene/protein expression | Changes in gene expression, mRNA splicing, topology, and biochemistry of cells, often display differential gene/protein levels compared with in vivo models | Expression of genes and proteins in vivo is relevantly presented in 3D models | Bingel et al[92], Ravi et al[106] |
Drug responses | Lack of correlation between 2D monolayer cell cultures and human tumors in drug testing. | Tumor cells in 3D culture showed drug resistance patterns similar to those observed in patients | Lv et al[11], Bingel et al[92] |
The culture formation | From minutes to a few hours | From a few hours to a few days | Dai et al[33] |
Quality of culture | High performance, reproducibility, long-term culture, easy to interpret, simplicity of culture | Worse performance and reproducibility, difficult to interpret, cultures are more difficult to carry out | Hickman et al[107] |
Access to essential compounds | Unlimited access to oxygen, nutrients, metabolites, and signaling molecules (in contrast to in vivo) | Variable access to oxygen, nutrients, metabolites, and signaling molecules (similar to in vivo) | Pampaloni et al[108], Senkowski et al[30] |
Cost during maintenance of a culture | Cheap, commercially available tests and media | More expensive, more time-consuming, fewer commercially available tests | Friedrich et al[35] |
Techniques | Advantages | Disadvantages | Research stage |
Liquid overlay cultures and Hanging drops | (1) Easy-to-use protocol; (2) No added materials; (3) Consistent spheroid formation; control over size Co-culture ability; (4) Transparent; (5) High reproducibility; (6) Inexpensive; (7) Easy to image/harvest samples | (1) No support or porosity; (2) Limited flexibility; (3) Limited spheroid size; (4) Heterogeneity of cell lineage; (5) Lack of matrix interaction | (1) Basic research; (2) Drug discovery; (3) Personalized medicine |
Hydrogel | (1) Large variety of natural or synthetic materials; (2) Customizable; (3) Co-culture possible; (4) Inexpensive; (5) High reproducibility | (1) Gelling mechanism; (2) Gel-to-gel variation and structural changes over time; (3) Undefined constituents in natural gels; (4) May not be transparent | (1) Basic research; (2) Drug discovery |
Bioreactors | (1) Simple to culture cells; (2) Large-scale production easily achievable; (3) Motion of culture assists nutrient transport; (4) Spheroids produced are easily accessible | (1) Specialized equipment required; (2) No control over cell number/size of spheroid; (3) Cells possibly exposed to shear force in spinner flasks (may be problematic for sensitive cells) | (1) Basic research; (2) Tissue engineering; (3) Cell expansion |
Scaffolds | (1) Large variety of materials possible for desired properties; (2) Customizable; (3) Co-cultures possible; (4) Medium cost | (1) Possible scaffold-to-scaffold variation; (2) May not be transparent; (3) Cell removal may be difficult | (1) Basic research; (2) Drug screening; (3) Drug discovery; (4) Cell expansion |
3D bioprinting | (1) Custom-made architecture; (2) Chemical, physical gradients; (3) High-throughput production; (4) Co-culture ability | (1) Require expensive 3D bioprinting machine; (2) Challenges with cells/materials | (1) Cancer pathology; (2) Anticancer drug screening; (3) Cancer treatment; (4) Tissue engineering |
Application/platform | Cells type | 3D model | Culture systems/matrix | Results | Ref. |
Drug-screening | Breast cancer cells (BT-549, BT-474 and T-47D) | Comparison of 2D- and 3D-culture models as drug-testing platforms in breast cancer | Spheroid formation in 3D-culture plates | Three breast cancer cell lines developed dense multicellular spheroids in 3D-culture and showed greater resistance to paclitaxel and doxorubicin compared to the 2D-cultured cells | Imamura et al[89] |
Metastasis studies and assessing drug sensitivity | Breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7) | Breast cancer bone metastasis | 3D bioprinting hydrogel | Breast cancer cells exhibited spheroid morphology and migratory characteristics, then co-culture of breast tumor cells with bone marrow MSCs increased the formation of spheroid clusters | Zhu et al[86] |
Cancer cell behavior | Breast cancer cells (MCF‑10) | Breast cancer progression | 3D spheroid cultures used U-bottom ultra-low attachment plates | Genetic dependencies can be uncovered when cells are grown in 3D conditions similar to in vivo | Peela et al[85] |
Drug-screening | Human colon cancer cells (HCT116) | Compared gene expression in 2D and 3D systems and identification of context-dependent drug responses | 3D spheroid cultures used low‐attachment plate (Corning, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) | 3D spheroids increased expression of genes involved in response to hypoxia and decreased expression of genes involved in cell-cycle progression when compared with monolayer profiles | Senkowski et al[30] |
GBM biology, anti-GBM drug screening | Human glioblastoma cells (U87) | Compared gene expression in 2D and 3D systems | 3D PLA porous scaffolds | GBM cells in 3D PLA culture expressed, 8117 and 3060 genes were upregulated and downregulated, respectively, compared to 2D cell culture conditions. Further, KEGG pathway analysis showed the upregulated genes were mainly enriched in PPAR and PI3K-Akt signaling pathways while the downregulated genes were enriched mainly in metabolism, ECM, and TGF-β pathways | Ma et al[87] |
Cancer and tumor cell biology | Human glioblastoma (U-251) | Compared gene and protein expression in 2D and 3D systems | ESPS scaffolds coated with laminin | The results suggested the influence of 3D context on integrin expression upregulation of the laminin-binding integrins alpha 6 and beta 4 | Ma et al[91] |
Cancer and tumor cell biology | Human glioblastoma (U-251) cells | Compared drug-sensitivity in 2D and 3D systems | 3D bioprinting of gelatin/alginate/ fibrinogen hydrogel | 3D bioprinted glioma stem cells were more resistant to temozolomide than 2D monolayer model at temozolomide concentrations of 400-1600 μg/mL | Dai et al[33] |
Cancer and tumor cell biology | Human glioblastoma (U-251) | Anti-cancer drug screening | 3D collagen scaffold | Glioma cells in 3D collagen scaffold culture enhanced resistance to chemotherapeutic alkylating agents with a much higher proportion of glioma stem cells and upregulation of MGMT | Lv et al[11] |
Cancer and tumor cell biology, development of new therapies and detection of cardiotoxicity | iPSC-derived human cardiomyocytes | Cardiac microtissues | Hanging drops | A 3D culture using iPSC-derived human CMs provided an organoid human-based cellular platform that recapitulated vital cardiac functionality | Beauchamp et al[94] |
Tissue engineering and toxicity assessment | Human hepatoblastoma (HepG2/C3A) | A liver-on-a-chip platform for long-term culture of 3D human HepG2/C3A spheroids for drug toxicity assessment | Bioprinting of hepatic constructs containing 3D hepatic spheroids | Hepatic construct by 3D bioprinting were functional during the 30 d culture period and responded to acetaminophen that induced a toxic | Bhise et al[98] |
Brain diseases | Human embryonic stem cells (HUES66), C57 | 3D neural tissues for use as tractable models of brain diseases | 3D hydrogels | 3D cocultures of neuronal and astrocytic cells can change expression patterns so that they correlate with specific brain regions and developmental stages | Tekin et al[101] |
Cancer and tumor cell biology, drug screening | Human neuroblastoma cell lines BE(2)-C (ECACC), IMR-32 (DSMZ) | Compared gene expression profiles in 2D and 3D systems and tumor tissue | Polymeric scaffolds and bioreactor systems | The autophagy-controlling transcription factors, such as TFEB and FOXO3, are upregulated in tumors, and 3D-grown cells have increased expression compared with cells grown in 2D conditions | Bingel et al[92] |
Cancer and tumor cell biology, neurodegenerative diseases | DPSCs | Differentiation to retinal ganglion-like cells | 3D fibrin hydrogel | 3D network can mimic the natural environment of retinal cells | Roozafzoon et al[95] |
Cardiovascular disease | hiPSCs | Cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells, co-differentiated from human pluripotent stem cells | V-bottom 96 well microplates | Human cardiac microtissues were generated in complex 3D structures and differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells into cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells that expressed cardiac markers also present in primary cardiac microvasculature | Giacomelli et al[110] |
Bioartificial liver support devices, drug screening and | hiPSCs | Differentiation of hiPSCs into hepatocytes | Nanofiber hydrogel 3D scaffold | 3D hydrogel culture conditions promote the differentiation of hiPSCs into hepatocytes | Luo et al[100] |
Ovarian cancer biology, drug sensitivity | Ovarian cancer cell lines (A2780 and OVCAR3) | Compared drug-sensitivity in 2D and 3D systems | Hanging drop | 3D tumor spheroids demonstrated greater resistance to cisplatin chemotherapy compared to 2D cultures | Raghavan et al[90] |
Pathogenesis of prostate cancer, prostate cancer therapy | Prostate cancer cell lines (PC3 and LNCaP) | Simulation of prostate cancer bone metastases | Collagen-based scaffolds | The two cell lines in 3D present increased resistance to docetaxel | Fitzgerald et al[111] |
Radiosensitivity of cancer cells | Human lung adenocarcinoma cell line (A549) | The metabolic response of lung cancer cells to ionizing radiation | Hydrogels | 3D model can help regulate the exposure of oxygen to subpopulations of cells in a tissue-like construct either before or after irradiation | Simon et al[112] |
Regenerative medicine, drug screening, and potentially disease modeling | HUVECs | Endothelial myocardium construction | 3D bioprinting | This technique could be translated to human cardiomyocytes derived from iPSCs to construct endothelial human myocardium | Zhang et al[99] |
Cancer cell biology, studying and developing therapies against cancer stem cells | Hepatocellular carcinoma (SK-Hep-1), prostate cancer (TRAMP-C2) and breast cancer (MDA-MB-231) | Compared cancer morphogenesis and gene expression in 2D and 3D systems | CA scaffolds | The three cell lines in 3D porous CA scaffolds promote cancer stem-like cell enrichment and increased expression of cancer stem cells genes (CD133 and NANOG) | Florczyk et al[28] |
- Citation: Chaicharoenaudomrung N, Kunhorm P, Noisa P. Three-dimensional cell culture systems as an in vitro platform for cancer and stem cell modeling. World J Stem Cells 2019; 11(12): 1065-1083
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-0210/full/v11/i12/1065.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4252/wjsc.v11.i12.1065