Abstract

Cell-based assays are heavily relied on in the drug discovery pipeline, quickly pairing down large compound libraries to a manageable number of drug candidates for further characterization and evaluation. Monolayer cultures in which cells are deposited onto the bottom of well plates are the workhorse of many of these screens despite continued evidence of their inability to predict in vivo responses. Three-dimensional (3D) culture platforms can generate tissue-like environments with more representative cellular phenotypes than monolayers but have proven challenging to incorporate into already-developed workflows. Scaffold-based approaches are a tractable means of generating tissue-like environments, supporting cell-laden gels whose preparation is analogous to depositing cells in a well plate. Here, we describe supported gel slab (SGS) scaffolds prepared from commercially available materials, an adhesive spray, and a laser cutter. These cell-containing scaffolds can readily fit into well plates, providing a format compatible with current liquid handlers and analytical instrumentation. The scaffolds enable the evaluation of cellular responses in individual or stacked structures, which contain extracellular matrix-rich microenvironments. With a series of demonstrations, we highlight the utility of the readily assembled SGS scaffolds to quantify cellular responses. These readouts include confocal microscopy, quantifying cellular invasion in Transwell-like and stacked formats, generating multilayered spheroid-on-demand structures capable of providing spatially resolved maps of drug responses, and identifying potential chemotherapies in a screening application.

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