Investigator
Karolinska Institutet, Department of Oncology-Pathology
Biomimetic organo-hydrogels reveal the adipose tissue local mechanical anisotropy regulates ovarian cancer invasion
Abstract High-grade serous ovarian cancer, the most common and aggressive ovarian cancer subtype, frequently metastasises to visceral adipose tissues. In these tissues, the extracellular matrix through which ovarian cancer cells migrate is constrained by the presence and preponderance of adipocytes. How cells migrate in this unique environment is not known, yet critical to understanding metastatic progression. To study these processes, we developed biomimetic organo-hydrogels that recreate structural, mechanical, and biochemical properties of human adipose tissues. We show that ovarian cancer cells present invasive tropism towards organo-hydrogels, replicating the behaviour observed in native adipose tissues. This migration is facilitated by the mechanical anisotropy and microstructure of organo-hydrogels and adipose tissues, allowing the formation of migratory tracks. These results highlight the contribution of adipocytes to tissue biophysical features as a key regulatory factor of ovarian cancer cell migration and demonstrate that organo-hydrogels are particularly relevant tools to develop in vitro models of complex tissue architectures with high cellularity.
Researcher
Karolinska Institutet · Department of Oncology-Pathology
Karolinska Institutet · Department of Microbiology, Tumor and Cell Biology
Queen Mary University of London · School of Engineering and Materials Science
Karolinska Institutet · Oncology-Pathology
PhD Cancer mechanobiology
University College London · UCL Institute for Liver and Digestive Health
MSc Biomedical research
Universitat Pompeu Fabra · Experimental and Health sciences
BSc Human Biology
Universitat Pompeu Fabra · Experimental and health sciences
Scopus: 55389003600
Researcher Id: KMA-2078-2024