dc.description.abstract | Glioblastoma is the most common and aggressive malignant brain tumor in adults. Existing
treatment choices that include surgery, radiation and chemotherapy are not successful in
long-term survival, while development of new anticancer drugs is being held back by the
lack of adequate model systems for anticancer drug testing. Namely, in traditionally used
two-dimensional (2D) monolayer cancer cell cultures the native cell morphology, polarity
and interactions between both cells and cells and extracellular components are either
changed or absent, while studies on animals often produce misleading results due to
interspecies differences. Hence, there is a pressing need for new glioblastoma model systems
that provide more in vivo-like environment for investigation and development of new
anticancer drugs. The aim of this work was to develop a biomimetic 3D environment for
cultivation of glioblastoma cells based on alginate microfibers as cell carriers and perfusion
bioreactors. Previous studies have shown that static cultures of cervical cancer cells SiHa
immobilized in alginate microfibers may be diffusion limited while perfusion, which
enhanced mass transport, has induced negative effects on human embryonic teratocarcinoma
cells NTERA-2 in superficial zones of alginate microbeads by hydrodynamic shear stresses.
Thus, in the present study, the specific focus was on optimization of cell concentration
within microfibers and regimes of cultivation to achieve beneficial effects of fluid flow in
perfusion bioreactors. A series of experiments were conducted in which the concentration of
rat glioma cells C6 was varied between 2 and 8 × 10
6
cell cm
-3
at several flowrates and
regimens of static and perfusion culture periods. Mixed results were obtained implying that
efficient mass transport has a higher effect in microfiber cultures at lower cell concentrations
(i.e. ~2 × 10
6
cell cm
-3
). In specific, medium flow at the superficial velocity of 100 µm s
-1
induced considerable cell proliferation as compared to control static cultures, which
maintained the initial cell numbers. Mathematical modelling indicated that the convective
transport of substances with low diffusion coefficients (~10
-19 m
2
s
-1
) may have induced the
observed positive effects. Still, exact relations of cultivation conditions and cell responses in
terms of viability, proliferation and metabolic activity should be further investigated. | sr |