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The Influence of Tissue Architecture on Drug Response : Anticancer Drug Development in High-Dimensional Combinatorial Microenvironment Platforms

Publiceringsår

2022

Upphovspersoner

Jokela, Tiina A.; Carlson, Eric G.; LaBarge, Mark A.

Abstrakt

Predicting how anticancer therapeutics will function in people based on preclinical studies remains a significant challenge. High rates of phase II clinical trial failures indicate that many candidate therapeutics that pass preclinical studies lack efficacy in patients. The discovery of oncogenes and tumor suppressors has led to vast investments into developing technologies that enable exploration of the total complexity of genomes and proteomes intrinsic to cells. These technologies seek to define how mutations contribute to cancer development and progression. An important and unexpected outcome of those massive investments to understand cancer as a cell-intrinsic problem is the undeniable conclusion that mutations do not explain everything. Indeed, the fact that frankly malignant cells can be phenotypically normal, when exposed to a normal tissue microenvironment (ME), suggests that there is a dominant role of the ME. Tumor microenvironments modulate the malignant phenotypes of cells and impact drug responses. In most drug screens, conventional two-dimensional plastic dishes are the substrate of choice for cell culture and rodents are used as the primary in vivo model, but these modalities lack context in a way that is relevant to predicting drug activity. Alternatively, combinatorial microenvironment microarray platforms provide a high-throughput means of exploring cell-based functional responses in diverse microenvironmental milieus. Data from these techniques are single-cell resolution and encapsulate cell–cell heterogeneity, which provides direct linkages between cellular phenotypes, such as drug responses, and MEs. This chapter focuses on the applications and analytic approaches used for functional cell-based exploration of combinatorial MEs using microarray technology.
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Organisationer och upphovspersoner

Publikationstyp

Publikationsform

Artikel

Moderpublikationens typ

Samlingsverk

Artikelstyp

Annan artikel

Målgrupp

Vetenskaplig

Kollegialt utvärderad

Kollegialt utvärderad

UKM:s publikationstyp

A3 Del av bok eller annat samlingsverk

Publikationskanalens uppgifter

Förläggare

Springer

Sidor

441-452

Publikationsforum

5952

Publikationsforumsnivå

2

Öppen tillgång

Öppen tillgänglighet i förläggarens tjänst

Nej

Parallellsparad

Nej

Övriga uppgifter

Vetenskapsområden

Biomedicinska vetenskaper; Cancersjukdomar

Nyckelord

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Publiceringsland

Schweiz

Förlagets internationalitet

Internationell

Språk

engelska

Internationell sampublikation

Ja

Sampublikation med ett företag

Nej

DOI

10.1007/978-3-030-98950-7_25

Publikationen ingår i undervisnings- och kulturministeriets datainsamling

Ja