Back to Search Start Over

A 3D in vitro assay to study combined immune cell infiltration and cytotoxicity.

Authors :
Crawford AJ
Johnston A
Du W
Hanna EA
Schell D
Wan Z
Chen TH
Wu F
Ren K
Lim Y
Nair PR
Wirtz D
Source :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology [bioRxiv] 2024 Mar 28. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Mar 28.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Immune cell-mediated killing of cancer cells in a solid tumor is prefaced by a multi-step infiltration cascade of invasion, directed migration, and cytotoxic activities. In particular, immune cells must invade and migrate through a series of different extracellular matrix (ECM) boundaries and domains before reaching and killing their target tumor cells. These infiltration events are a central challenge to the clinical success of CAR T cells against solid tumors. The current standard in vitro cell killing assays measure cell cytotoxicity in an obstacle-free, two-dimensional (2D) microenvironment, which precludes the study of 3D immune cell-ECM interactions. Here, we present a 3D combined infiltration/cytotoxicity assay based on an oil-in-water microtechnology. This assay measures stromal invasion following extravasation, migration through the stromal matrix, and invasion of the solid tumor in addition to cell killing. We compare this 3D cytotoxicity assay to the benchmark 2D assay through tumor assembloid cocultures with immune cells and engineered immune cells. This assay is amenable to an array of imaging techniques, which allows direct observation and quantification of each stage of infiltration in different immune and oncological contexts. We establish the 3D infiltration/cytotoxicity assay as an important tool for the mechanistic study of immune cell interactions with the tumor microenvironment.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Accession number :
38586013
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.03.27.586980