Investigator

Francesca Taraballi

Director Center for Musculoskeletal Regeneration · Houston Methodist Research Insistute, Orthopaedic

About

FTFrancesca Tarabal…
Papers(1)
Mechanomimetic 3D Sca…
Collaborators(3)
Kate MurphyDeyarina GonzalezFrancesca Paradiso
Institutions(3)
Houston MethodistSingleton HospitalSwansea University

Papers

Mechanomimetic 3D Scaffolds as a Humanized In Vitro Model for Ovarian Cancer

The mechanical homeostasis of tissues can be altered in response to trauma or disease, such as cancer, resulting in altered mechanotransduction pathways that have been shown to impact tumor development, progression, and the efficacy of therapeutic approaches. Specifically, ovarian cancer progression is parallel to an increase in tissue stiffness and fibrosis. With in vivo models proving difficult to study, tying tissue mechanics to altered cellular and molecular properties necessitate advanced, tunable, in vitro 3D models able to mimic normal and tumor mechanic features. First, we characterized normal human ovary and high-grade serous (HGSC) ovarian cancer tissue stiffness to precisely mimic their mechanical features on collagen I-based sponge scaffolds, soft (NS) and stiff (MS), respectively. We utilized three ovarian cancer cell lines (OVCAR-3, Caov-3, and SKOV3) to evaluate changes in viability, morphology, proliferation, and sensitivity to doxorubicin and liposomal doxorubicin treatment in response to a mechanically different microenvironment. High substrate stiffness promoted the proliferation of Caov-3 and SKOV3 cells without changing their morphology, and upregulated mechanosensors YAP/TAZ only in SKOV3 cells. After 7 days in culture, both OVCAR3 and SKOV3 decreased the MS scaffold storage modulus (stiffness), suggesting a link between cell proliferation and the softening of the matrix. Finally, high matrix stiffness resulted in higher OVCAR-3 and SKOV3 cell cytotoxicity in response to doxorubicin. This study demonstrates the promise of biomimetic porous scaffolds for effective inclusion of mechanical parameters in 3D cancer modeling. Furthermore, this work establishes the use of porous scaffolds for studying ovarian cancer cells response to mechanical changes in the microenvironment and as a meaningful platform from which to investigate chemoresistance and drug response.

109Works
1Papers
3Collaborators

Positions

Director Center for Musculoskeletal Regeneration

Houston Methodist Research Insistute · Orthopaedic

Education

2009

Ph. D in Nanotechnology and Nanostructures

University of Milan - Bicocca · Materials Science

2004

M.S.

University of Milan - Bicocca · Biotechnology and Bioscience

Country

US

Keywords
drug delivery systemsstem cellsbiomaterialsinflammation