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Method Article
This manuscript describes a soft lithography-based technique to engineer uniform arrays of three-dimensional (3D) epithelial tissues of defined geometry surrounded by extracellular matrix. This method is amenable to a wide variety of cell types and experimental contexts and allows for high-throughput screening of identical replicates.
The architecture of branched organs such as the lungs, kidneys, and mammary glands arises through the developmental process of branching morphogenesis, which is regulated by a variety of soluble and physical signals in the microenvironment. Described here is a method created to study the process of branching morphogenesis by forming engineered three-dimensional (3D) epithelial tissues of defined shape and size that are completely embedded within an extracellular matrix (ECM). This method enables the formation of arrays of identical tissues and enables the control of a variety of environmental factors, including tissue geometry, spacing, and ECM composition. This method can also be combined with widely used techniques such as traction force microscopy (TFM) to gain more information about the interactions between cells and their surrounding ECM. The protocol can be used to investigate a variety of cell and tissue processes beyond branching morphogenesis, including cancer invasion.
The development of branched epithelial tissues, known as branching morphogenesis, is regulated by cell-derived, physical, and environmental factors. In the mammary gland, branching morphogenesis is an iterative process through which guided collective cell migration creates a tree-like architecture. The first step is primary bud formation from the milk ducts, followed by branch initiation and elongation1,2. Invasion of branches into the surrounding stroma is induced by the systemic release of steroid hormones at puberty. New primary buds then initiate from the ends of existing branches, and this process continues to create an epithelial tree3. Although many important biochemical signals have been identified, a comprehensive understanding of the cell biological mechanisms that guide this complex developmental process is currently lacking. Moreover, mechanistic studies on the influences of specific cues are difficult to deconstruct from experiments in vivo, as precise spatiotemporal perturbations and measurements are often not possible.
Three-dimensional (3D) culture techniques, such as whole organ culture, primary organoids, and cell culture models, are useful tools for systematically investigating the mechanisms underlying tissue morphogenesis4-6. These can be particularly useful for determining the influences of specific factors individually, such as mechanical forces and biochemical signals, on a variety of cell behaviors, including migration, proliferation, and differentiation.6 Engineered cell culture models, in particular, readily enable the perturbation of individual cells and their microenvironment.
One such culture model uses a microfabrication-based approach to engineer model mammary epithelial tissues with controlled 3D structure that consistently and reproducibly form branches that migrate collectively when induced with the appropriate growth factors. The major advantage of the model is the ability to precisely manipulate and measure the effects of physical and biochemical factors, such as patterns of mechanical stress, with high statistical confidence. This technique, together with computational modeling, has already been used to determine the relative contributions of physical and biochemical signals in the guidance of the normal development of mammary epithelial tissues and other branched epithelia7-11. Presented here is a detailed protocol for building these model tissues, which can be readily extended to other types of cells and extracellular matrix (ECM) gels, and which serves as a potential tool for the testing of therapeutics.
1. Preparation of Solutions
2. Preparation of Elastomeric Stamps for 3D Micropatterning
Note: Elastomeric stamps are made with PDMS.
3. Preparation of 3D Epithelial Tissues
4. Immunofluorescence and Image Analysis
General schematic of mammary epithelial tissue microfabrication
A general schematic of the microfabrication procedure outlining the experimental work flow is shown in Figure 1. The end result is an array of epithelial tissues of identical geometry and spacing that are completely embedded within an ECM gel. A representative experiment uses EpH4 mouse mammary epithelial cells cultured in a gel of bovine type I collagen at a conce...
The protocol described above outlines a method to produce identical epithelial tissues of pre-defined shape, enabling spatial control of the mechanical stress experienced by cells in the tissue. An elastomeric mold is used to create cavities in type I collagen that are then filled with epithelial cells and covered with an additional collagen layer such that cells are completely encapsulated in a 3D collagen matrix environment. Further culture of these tissues and treatment with growth factors to induce branching from the...
The authors declare that they have no competing financial interests.
This work was supported in part by grants from the NIH (HL118532, HL120142, CA187692), the David & Lucile Packard Foundation, the Camille & Henry Dreyfus Foundation, and the Burroughs Welcome Fund. A.S.P. was supported in part by a Charlotte Elizabeth Procter Honorific Fellowship.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) | Ellsworth Adhesives | Sylgard 184 | |
PDMS curing agent | Ellsworth Adhesives | Sylgard 184 | |
Lithographically patterned silicon master | self-made | N/A | |
Plastic weigh boat | Fisher Scientific | 08-732-115 | |
100-mm-diameter Petri dishes | BioExpress | D-2550-2 | |
Ethyl Alcohol 200 Proof | Pharmco-Aaper | 111000200 | Make a 70% EtOH (v:v) solution by mixing with dH2O |
Razor blade | American Safety Razor | 620179 | |
1:1 Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle’s Medium : Ham’s F12 Nutrient Mixture (DMEM/F12) (1:1) | Hyclone | SH30023FS | |
Fetal Bovine Serum (FBS) | Atlanta Biologicals | S11150H | |
10x Hank’s balanced salt solution (HBSS) | Life Technologies | 14185-052 | |
Insulin | Sigma Aldrich | I6634-500MG | |
Gentamicin | Life Technologies | 15750-060 | |
10x Phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) | Fisher Scientific | BP399-500 | |
Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) | Sigma Aldrich | 221465-500G | |
Bovine type I collagen (non-pepsinized) | Koken | IAC-50 | |
Albumin from bovine serum (BSA) | Sigma Aldrich | A-7906 | |
Curved stainless steel tweezers | Dumont | 7 | |
35-mm-diameter tissue culture dishes | BioExpress | T-2881-6 | |
15 ml conical tubes | BioExpress | C-3394-2 | |
1.5 ml Eppendorf Safe-Lock Tube | USA Scientific | 1615-5500 | |
Circular #1 glass coverslips, 15-mm in diameter | Bellco Glass Inc. | Special order | |
0.05% 1x Trypsin-EDTA | Life Technologies | 25300-054 | |
Paraformaldehyde | VWR | 100503-916 | |
Triton X-100 | Perkin Elmer | N9300260 | Detergent |
HGF | Sigma Aldrich | H 9661 | Resuspended in dH2O at 50 mg/ml |
Rabbit anti-mouse FAK antibody | Life Technologies | AMO0672 | |
Goat anti-rabbit Alexa 488 antibody | Life Technologies | A-11034 | |
Adobe Photoshop | Adobe | N/A | Used for color-coding pixel frequency maps. |
FIJI (ImageJ) | NIH | N/A | Free image analysis software used for thresholding, registering, and overlaying images to create a pixel frequency map. The StackReg plugin was used for registering binary images. |
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