Abstract

Simple SummaryThis study aims to overcome the current methodological limitations in discovering new therapeutic targets. Therefore, we optimized and validated a co-culture system using decellularized human liver three-dimensional (3D) scaffolds obtained from healthy and cirrhotic human livers for anti-fibrotic and anti-cancer dual drug screening. Both platforms mimic the naturally healthy and physio-pathological microenvironment and are able to recapitulate the key cellular and molecular events leading to liver fibrogenesis and cancer. This study demonstrates the differences between single versus co-cultures and the usage of human-derived liver 3D ECM scaffolds from healthy and cirrhotic livers. As lead compounds, we used Sorafenib and Regorafenib, first- and second-line drugs, and identified two different drug-induced mechanisms depending on the 3D ECM microenvironment. The 3D ECM scaffolds may represent innovative platforms for disease modeling, biomarker discovery, and drug testing in fibrosis and primary cancer.The introduction of new preclinical models for in vitro drug discovery and testing based on 3D tissue-specific extracellular matrix (ECM) is very much awaited. This study was aimed at developing and validating a co-culture model using decellularized human liver 3D ECM scaffolds as a platform for anti-fibrotic and anti-cancer drug testing. Decellularized 3D scaffolds obtained from healthy and cirrhotic human livers were bioengineered with LX2 and HEPG2 as single and co-cultures for up to 13 days and validated as a new drug-testing platform. Pro-fibrogenic markers and cancer phenotypic gene/protein expression and secretion were differently affected when single and co-cultures were exposed to TGF-β1 with specific ECM-dependent effects. The anti-fibrotic efficacy of Sorafenib significantly reduced TGF-β1-induced pro-fibrogenic effects, which coincided with a downregulation of STAT3 phosphorylation. The anti-cancer efficacy of Regorafenib was significantly reduced in 3D bioengineered cells when compared to 2D cultures and dose-dependently associated with cell apoptosis by cleaved PARP-1 activation and P-STAT3 inhibition. Regorafenib reversed TGF-β1-induced P-STAT3 and SHP-1 through induction of epithelial mesenchymal marker E-cadherin and downregulation of vimentin protein expression in both co-cultures engrafting healthy and cirrhotic 3D scaffolds. In their complex, the results of the study suggest that this newly proposed 3D co-culture platform is able to reproduce the natural physio-pathological microenvironment and could be employed for anti-fibrotic and anti-HCC drug screening.

Highlights

  • Liver fibrosis is characterized by excessive extracellular matrix (ECM) accumulation in response to chronic liver injury, with possible progression to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)

  • In the first set of experiments, we investigated whether a 3D co-culture system of LX2 and HepG2 cells could affect cell-cell specific functions compared to 3D mono-cultures

  • Two reseeding co-culture protocols were tested: (1) a simultaneous repopulation (SimCC) of LX2 cells with HepG2 cells, and (2) a sequential repopulation (SeqCC) in which LX2 cells were first reseeded followed by the introduction of HepG2 cells at day 7

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Summary

Introduction

Liver fibrosis is characterized by excessive extracellular matrix (ECM) accumulation in response to chronic liver injury, with possible progression to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Culturing freshly isolated quiescent hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) on a 2D plastic culture dish leads to spontaneous activation and transdifferentiation into myofibroblast-like cells due to the high surface tension (approximately 20 Giga Pa) of the plastic surface [10,11] This is in strong contrast with the cell–tissue tension measured in healthy and cirrhotic human decellularized liver, i.e., 2 kPa and 5 kPa, respectively [12]. This is further supported by the significantly greater drug resistance observed in 3D co-culture cell models, such as spheroids or collagen gels, compared to what was previously observed in 2D models, indicating that tumor microenvironment (TME) and tissue tension can represent essential factors affecting cancer cell behavior and susceptibility to treatment [13,14]

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