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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2019 Nov 1.
Published in final edited form as: Nat Rev Mater. 2018 Sep 6;3(11):418–430.

Table 1 |.

Biomaterials for modelling the tumour microenvironment

Biomaterial Model Advantages Disadvantages Refs
Synthetic material
Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) 2D micropatterns Flexible substrate with patterns promoting cancer cell alignment Uncertain viscoelastic mechanics and protein attachment 37,148
Microchannels and microfluidics • Directed cell migration in channels
• Cell confinement
• Confined fluid flow for controlled application of shear stress to cells
• Curing ratios often create materials that are less flexible
• Static substrate
23,114
Polyethylene glycol diacrylate (PEGDA) 3D culture • Wide stiffness range
• Direct conjugation of many types of adhesive ligands
• Can be used to identify tumour-specific stiffness
51
Polyethylene glycol (PEG) 3D culture • Wide stiffness range
• Direct conjugation of many types of adhesive ligands or degradable linkers
• Inert and biocompatible
Backbone is not degradable 39,149,150
Poly(lactide-co-glycolide) acid (PLGA) 3D culture • Porous scaffold
• Biocompatible
• Biodegradable
Methyl side groups increase hydrophobicity 151,152
Implantable material Recruitment and capture of metastatic cells Degradation prior to cell capture 93
Poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) Implantable material Recruitment and capture of metastatic and immune cells Degradation prior to cell capture 92
Polyacrylamide Substrate gradients • Sequential polymerization to create spatial patterns
• Indication of metastatic cell ‘memory’
• Small well polymerization for high-throughput drug screens
Substrate stiffness does not change with time 153155
Used with Matrigel overlay for 3D culture • Wide stiffness range
• Conjugation of individual or multiple ligands resulting in nonlinear cell responses
• Cytotoxic prior to polymerization, preventing cell encapsulation
• Difficult to measure forces in 3D
3,30,40,45
Elastic 2D substrate Measurement of traction forces in cancer cells • Cytotoxic prior to polymerization, preventing cell encapsulation
• Difficult to measure forces in 3D
42
Synthetic-natural hybrid materials
Polyethylene glycol-heparin 3D culture • Direct conjugation of adhesive ligands
• Enzymatically degradable
Limited degradation control 38
Methacrylated hyaluronic acid (MeHA) 3D culture • Direct conjugation of adhesive ligands
• Enzymatically degradable
• Temporal gradients through sequential crosslinking
• Radical polymerization limits in vivo application
• Can induce DNA damage
• Modifications can reduce bioactivity
44,54,55
Natural materials
Matrigel 3D culture • Established fibrillar model system
• Temperature-based polymerization
• Easy encapsulation methods
• Growth factor-reduced version
• 3D organization of acinar structures
• Batch-to-batch variation
• Difficult to independently modulate parameters
• Tumour-derived (inductive composition)
• Temperature sensitive
8,9,11,30
Alginate 3D culture • Stiffness can be modulated independently of architecture
• Time-dependent stiffening with calcium crosslinking
• Enables mammary epithelial cells to polarize before EMT
Calcium-dependent covalent bonds 56,156
Type I collagen 3D culture • Fibrillar
• Adhesion of multiple cell types
• Facilitates cell invasion
• Shows same radiation damage as tumours
• Transglutaminases and oxidases can crosslink with limited range Harsh organics are more common crosslinkers with a wider range
• Limited stiffness range of ~1–1,000 Pa
23,35,69,157
Matrigel-impregnated Migration is biphasic and directly dependent on concentration • Pore size changes with Matrigel concentration
• Limited ligand presentation
31,32
Agarose-impregnated • Stiffness can be modulated independently of ligand density
• Restricted invasion of glioma cells
Pore size changes with agarose concentration 63

EMT, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition.