Three-dimensional in vitro cancer spheroid models for Photodynamic Therapy: Strengths and Opportunities

Three dimensional, in vitro spheroid cultures offer considerable utility for the development and testing of anticancer photodynamic therapy regimens. More complex than monolayer cultures, three-dimensional spheroid systems replicate many of the important cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions that m...

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Main Author: Conor L Evans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Physics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphy.2015.00015/full
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spelling doaj-98be7bc28ae44c0a83f740a1af1daa252020-11-24T23:05:05ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physics2296-424X2015-03-01310.3389/fphy.2015.00015135044Three-dimensional in vitro cancer spheroid models for Photodynamic Therapy: Strengths and OpportunitiesConor L Evans0Massachusetts General Hospital / Harvard Medical SchoolThree dimensional, in vitro spheroid cultures offer considerable utility for the development and testing of anticancer photodynamic therapy regimens. More complex than monolayer cultures, three-dimensional spheroid systems replicate many of the important cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions that modulate treatment response in vivo. Simple enough to be grown by the thousands and small enough to be optically interrogated, spheroid cultures lend themselves to high-content and high-throughput imaging approaches. These advantages have enabled studies investigating photosensitizer uptake, spatiotemporal patterns of therapeutic response, alterations in oxygen diffusion and consumption during therapy, and the exploration of mechanisms that underlie therapeutic synergy. The use of quantitative imaging methods, in particular, has accelerated the pace of three-dimensional in vitro photodynamic therapy studies, enabling the rapid compilation of multiple treatment response parameters in a single experiment. Improvements in model cultures, the creation of new molecular probes of cell state and function, and innovations in imaging toolkits will be important for the advancement of spheroid culture systems for future photodynamic therapy studies.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphy.2015.00015/fullimagingoxygenationspheroids3D culturesAdvanced Microscopy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Conor L Evans
spellingShingle Conor L Evans
Three-dimensional in vitro cancer spheroid models for Photodynamic Therapy: Strengths and Opportunities
Frontiers in Physics
imaging
oxygenation
spheroids
3D cultures
Advanced Microscopy
author_facet Conor L Evans
author_sort Conor L Evans
title Three-dimensional in vitro cancer spheroid models for Photodynamic Therapy: Strengths and Opportunities
title_short Three-dimensional in vitro cancer spheroid models for Photodynamic Therapy: Strengths and Opportunities
title_full Three-dimensional in vitro cancer spheroid models for Photodynamic Therapy: Strengths and Opportunities
title_fullStr Three-dimensional in vitro cancer spheroid models for Photodynamic Therapy: Strengths and Opportunities
title_full_unstemmed Three-dimensional in vitro cancer spheroid models for Photodynamic Therapy: Strengths and Opportunities
title_sort three-dimensional in vitro cancer spheroid models for photodynamic therapy: strengths and opportunities
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physics
issn 2296-424X
publishDate 2015-03-01
description Three dimensional, in vitro spheroid cultures offer considerable utility for the development and testing of anticancer photodynamic therapy regimens. More complex than monolayer cultures, three-dimensional spheroid systems replicate many of the important cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions that modulate treatment response in vivo. Simple enough to be grown by the thousands and small enough to be optically interrogated, spheroid cultures lend themselves to high-content and high-throughput imaging approaches. These advantages have enabled studies investigating photosensitizer uptake, spatiotemporal patterns of therapeutic response, alterations in oxygen diffusion and consumption during therapy, and the exploration of mechanisms that underlie therapeutic synergy. The use of quantitative imaging methods, in particular, has accelerated the pace of three-dimensional in vitro photodynamic therapy studies, enabling the rapid compilation of multiple treatment response parameters in a single experiment. Improvements in model cultures, the creation of new molecular probes of cell state and function, and innovations in imaging toolkits will be important for the advancement of spheroid culture systems for future photodynamic therapy studies.
topic imaging
oxygenation
spheroids
3D cultures
Advanced Microscopy
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphy.2015.00015/full
work_keys_str_mv AT conorlevans threedimensionalinvitrocancerspheroidmodelsforphotodynamictherapystrengthsandopportunities
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