Biological high throughput screening of 2D and 3D cell cultures for future industrial up-scaling

Author(s):  
C. Gallert ◽  
R. Lehmann ◽  
T. Roddelkopf ◽  
S. Junginger ◽  
K. Thurow
RSC Advances ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (72) ◽  
pp. 44397-44397
Author(s):  
Zhipan Wu ◽  
Rongfa Guan ◽  
Miao Tao ◽  
Fei Lyu ◽  
Guozhou Cao ◽  
...  

Correction for ‘Assessment of the toxicity and inflammatory effects of different-sized zinc oxide nanoparticles in 2D and 3D cell cultures’ by Zhipan Wu, Rongfa Guan, Miao Tao et al., RSC Adv., 2017, 7, 12437–12445, DOI: 10.1039/C6RA27334C.


2016 ◽  
Vol 213 (3) ◽  
pp. 355-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paulina S. Mrozowska ◽  
Mitsunori Fukuda

MDCK II cells, a widely used model of polarized epithelia, develop into different structures depending on culture conditions: two-dimensional (2D) monolayers when grown on synthetic supports or three-dimensional (3D) cysts when surrounded by an extracellular matrix. The establishment of epithelial polarity is accompanied by transcytosis of the apical marker podocalyxin from the outer plasma membrane to the newly formed apical domain, but its exact route and regulation remain poorly understood. Here, through comprehensive colocalization and knockdown screenings, we identified the Rab GTPases mediating podocalyxin transcytosis and showed that different sets of Rabs coordinate its transport during cell polarization in 2D and 3D structures. Moreover, we demonstrated that different Rab35 effectors regulate podocalyxin trafficking in 2D and 3D environments; trafficking is mediated by OCRL in 2D monolayers and ACAP2 in 3D cysts. Our results give substantial insight into regulation of the transcytosis of this apical marker and highlight differences between trafficking mechanisms in 2D and 3D cell cultures.


2013 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 855-866 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre-Marc Juneau ◽  
Alain Garnier ◽  
Carl Duchesne

AbstractAcquiring and processing phase-contrast microscopy images in wide-field long-term live-cell imaging and high-throughput screening applications is still a challenge as the methodology and algorithms used must be fast, simple to use and tune, and as minimally intrusive as possible. In this paper, we developed a simple and fast algorithm to compute the cell-covered surface (degree of confluence) in phase-contrast microscopy images. This segmentation algorithm is based on a range filter of a specified size, a minimum range threshold, and a minimum object size threshold. These parameters were adjusted in order to maximize the F-measure function on a calibration set of 200 hand-segmented images, and its performance was compared with other algorithms proposed in the literature. A set of one million images from 37 myoblast cell cultures under different conditions were processed to obtain their cell-covered surface against time. The data were used to fit exponential and logistic models, and the analysis showed a linear relationship between the kinetic parameters and passage number and highlighted the effect of culture medium quality on cell growth kinetics. This algorithm could be used for real-time monitoring of cell cultures and for high-throughput screening experiments upon adequate tuning.


2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (S1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sigrid A Langhans ◽  
Peter Worthington ◽  
Kathleen Drake ◽  
Zhiqin Li ◽  
Andrew Napper ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Robert H. Utama ◽  
Lakmali Atapattu ◽  
Aidan P. O’Mahony ◽  
Christopher M. Fife ◽  
Jongho Baek ◽  
...  

Abstract3D in vitro cancer models are important therapeutic and biological discovery tools, yet formation of multicellular spheroids in a throughput and highly controlled manner to achieve robust and statistically relevant data, remains challenging. Here, we developed an enabling technology consisting of a bespoke drop-on-demand 3D bioprinter capable of high-throughput printing of 96-well plates of spheroids. 3D-multicellular spheroids are embedded inside a tissue-like matrix with precise control over size and cell number. Application of 3D bioprinting for high-throughput drug screening was demonstrated with doxorubicin. Measurements showed that IC50 values were sensitive to spheroid size, embedding and how spheroids conform to the embedding, revealing parameters shaping biological responses in these models. Our study demonstrates the potential of 3D bioprinting as a robust high-throughput platform to screen biological and therapeutic parameters.Significance StatementIn vitro 3D cell cultures serve as more realistic models, compared to 2D cell culture, for understanding diverse biology and for drug discovery. Preparing 3D cell cultures with defined parameters is challenging, with significant failure rates when embedding 3D multicellular spheroids into extracellular mimics. Here, we report a new 3D bioprinter we developed in conjunction with bioinks to allow 3D-multicellular spheroids to be produced in a high-throughput manner. High-throughput production of embedded multicellular spheroids allowed entire drug-dose responses to be performed in 96-well plate format with statistically relevant numbers of data points. We have deconvoluted important parameters in drug responses including the impact of spheroid size and embedding in an extracellular matrix mimic on IC50 values.


2013 ◽  
Vol 35 (5) ◽  
pp. 456-461 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meeyoung Cho ◽  
Tae-Jun Cho ◽  
Jeong Mook Lim ◽  
Gene Lee ◽  
Jaejin Cho

2012 ◽  
Vol 110 (2) ◽  
pp. 563-572 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abigail D. Bellis ◽  
Beatriz Peñalver Bernabé ◽  
Michael S. Weiss ◽  
Seungjin Shin ◽  
Stanley Weng ◽  
...  

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