Abstract

Glioblastoma is the most lethal primary malignant brain tumor in adults. Simplified two-dimensional (2D) cell culture and neurospheres in vitro models fail to recapitulate the complexity of the tumor microenvironment, limiting its ability to predict therapeutic response. Three-dimensional (3D) scaffold-based models have emerged as a promising alternative for addressing these concerns. One such 3D system is gelatin methacrylate (GelMA) hydrogels, and we aimed to understand the suitability of using this system to mimic treatment-resistant glioblastoma cells that reside in specific niches. We characterized the phenotype of patient-derived glioma cells cultured in GelMA hydrogels (3D-GMH) for their tumorigenic properties using invasion and chemoresponse assays. In addition, we used integrated single-cell and spatial transcriptome analysis to compare cells cultured in 3D-GMH to neoplastic cells in vivo. Finally, we assessed tumor-immune cell interactions with a macrophage infiltration assay and a cytokine array. We show that the 3D-GMH system enriches treatment-resistant mesenchymal cells that are not represented in neurosphere cultures. Cells cultured in 3D-GMH resemble a mesenchymal-like cellular phenotype found in perivascular and hypoxic regions and recruit macrophages by secreting cytokines, a hallmark of the mesenchymal phenotype. Our 3D-GMH model effectively mimics the phenotype of glioma cells that are found in the perivascular and hypoxic niches of the glioblastoma core in situ, in contrast to the neurosphere cultures that enrich cells of the infiltrative edge of the tumor. This contrast highlights the need for due diligence in selecting an appropriate model when designing a study‘s objectives.

Highlights

  • Glioblastoma is the most lethal primary malignant brain tumor in adults

  • We used seven high-grade glioma samples (Supplementary File-1) collected from patients who received a craniotomy at Mazumdar Shaw Medical Center (MSMC) along with glioblastoma cell line U251 for our study

  • Patient-derived glioma cells were cultured in 2D with serum before being propagated either as neurospheres in serum-free media with growth factors to enrich for glioma stem-like cells (GSC)[24] or cultured in 2D, 2D under hypoxia, and 3D-GMH with serum

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Summary

Introduction

Glioblastoma is the most lethal primary malignant brain tumor in adults. Simplified two-dimensional (2D) cell culture and neurospheres in vitro models fail to recapitulate the complexity of the tumor microenvironment, limiting its ability to predict therapeutic response. Our 3D-GMH model effectively mimics the phenotype of glioma cells that are found in the perivascular and hypoxic niches of the glioblastoma core in situ, in contrast to the neurosphere cultures that enrich cells of the infiltrative edge of the tumor. Overlay of single-cell data on GBM histologic features suggest that microenvironment greatly influences the tumor cell phenotype with mesenchymal stem-like cells residing in hypoxic and perivascular n­ iche[1,9] This conservation of molecular and cellular phenotype for a specific anatomic feature across patients makes simultaneous targeting of these features an attractive therapeutic approach and underscores the need for biomimetic in vitro models that most closely represent distinct in vivo ­microenvironments[1,8,9]

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