Jinlong Jin, Wei Chen, Jing Li, Jiahuan Yang, Rui Dai, Junjie Tang, Meiqi Li, You Chen, Changhua Zhang, Jie Liu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Colorectal cancer is a prominent global malignancy that highlights the pressing need for reliable preclinical models to expedite therapeutic efficacy and drug discovery. Traditional models, such as cell lines and patient-derived xenografts, are constrained by their inability to fully replicate tumor heterogeneity and support scalable drug screening. While patient-derived organoids more accurately preserve tumor pathophysiology, their clinical translation is impeded by technical challenges related to standardization, reproducibility, and high-throughput compatibility. In this study, we developed a microfluidic-engineered platform that employed a laminin-enhanced decellularized small intestinal submucosa extracellular matrix (dSISML) to produce uniform organoid-laden microspheres (MP). This biohybrid system eliminated the need for tumor-derived matrices (e.g. Matrigel) and provided a physiologically relevant microenvironment. When integrated with microfluidics, the platform facilitated rapid and scalable production of size-tunable MP, thereby effectively addressing critical bottlenecks in organoid handling and drug testing workflows. Our study demonstrated that dSISML could sustain organoid growth and drug responsiveness comparable to Matrigel, while offering improved operational simplicity and reduced batch variability. Moreover, dSISML enabled simpler and controllable high-throughput microsphere preparation. This advanced methodology not only delivers precision equivalent to conventional cell culture techniques but also empowers large-scale pharmacological evaluation through its automated media processing system. By integrating biomimetic design with scalable fabrication, this strategy advances personalized oncology through robustin vitromodels for high-throughput therapeutic screening and mechanistic studies.
期刊介绍:
Biofabrication is dedicated to advancing cutting-edge research on the utilization of cells, proteins, biological materials, and biomaterials as fundamental components for the construction of biological systems and/or therapeutic products. Additionally, it proudly serves as the official journal of the International Society for Biofabrication (ISBF).