Skip to Content
Merck
  • Tissue-engineered 3D melanoma model with blood and lymphatic capillaries for drug development.

Tissue-engineered 3D melanoma model with blood and lymphatic capillaries for drug development.

Scientific reports (2018-09-06)
Jennifer Bourland, Julie Fradette, François A Auger
ABSTRACT

While being the rarest skin cancer, melanoma is also the deadliest. To further drug discovery and improve clinical translation, new human cell-based in vitro models are needed. Our work strives to mimic the melanoma microenvironment in vitro as an alternative to animal testing. We used the self-assembly method to produce a 3D human melanoma model exempt of exogenous biomaterial. This model is based on primary human skin cells and melanoma cell lines while including a key feature for tumor progression: blood and lymphatic capillaries. Major components of the tumor microenvironment such as capillaries, human extracellular matrix, a stratified epidermis (involucrin, filaggrin) and basement membrane (laminin 332) are recapitulated in vitro. We demonstrate the persistence of CD31+ blood and podoplanin+/LYVE-1+ lymphatic capillaries in the engineered tissue. Chronic treatment with vemurafenib was applied to the model and elicited a dose-dependent response on proliferation and apoptosis, making it a promising tool to test new compounds in a human-like environment.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Monoclonal Anti-Involucrin antibody produced in mouse, clone SY5, ascites fluid
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Collagen Type VII Antibody, CT, clone LH7.2, ascites fluid, clone LH7.2, Chemicon®
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Laminin-5 (γ2 chain) Antibody, clone D4B5, clone D4B5, Chemicon®, from mouse