Human Patient-Derived Brain Tumor Models to Recapitulate Ependymoma Tumor Vasculature

Author:

Tang-Schomer Min D.1,Bookland Markus J.2ORCID,Sargent Jack E.3,N. Jackvony Taylor1

Affiliation:

1. UConn Health, Department of Pediatrics, 263 Farmington Avenue, Farmington, CT 06030, USA

2. Connecticut Children’s Medical Center, 282 Washington St., Hartford, CT 06106, USA

3. The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine, 10 Discovery Drive, Farmington, CT 06030, USA

Abstract

Despite in vivo malignancy, ependymoma lacks cell culture models, thus limiting therapy development. Here, we used a tunable three-dimensional (3D) culture system to approximate the ependymoma microenvironment for recapitulating a patient’s tumor in vitro. Our data showed that the inclusion of VEGF in serum-free, mixed neural and endothelial cell culture media supported the in vitro growth of all four ependymoma patient samples. The growth was driven by Nestin and Ki67 double-positive cells in a putative cancer stem cell niche, which was manifested as rosette-looking clusters in 2D and spheroids in 3D. The effects of extracellular matrix (ECM) such as collagen or Matrigel superseded that of the media conditions, with Matrigel resulting in the greater enrichment of Nestin-positive cells. When mixed with endothelial cells, the 3D co-culture models developed capillary networks resembling the in vivo ependymoma vasculature. The transcriptomic analysis of two patient cases demonstrated the separation of in vitro cultures by individual patients, with one patient’s culture samples closely clustered with the primary tumor tissue. While VEGF was found to be necessary for preserving the transcriptomic features of in vitro cultures, the presence of endothelial cells shifted the gene’s expression patterns, especially genes associated with ECM remodeling. The homeobox genes were mostly affected in the 3D in vitro models compared to the primary tumor tissue and between different 3D formats. These findings provide a basis for understanding the ependymoma microenvironment and enabling the further development of patient-derived in vitro ependymoma models for personalized medicine.

Funder

Connecticut Children’s Medical Center (CCMC) Strategic Research Fund

UConn Health Stimulus Award

CCMC Surgical Research Seed Grant

American Brain Tumor Association Discovery Grant

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Bioengineering

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