A Tumor You Can Unroll: Engineers Create New Technology for Understanding Cancer Growth

“It’s simple enough that one could teach an undergrad to do it in a week,” professor says

Written byTyler Irving-University of Toronto News Office
| 3 min read
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A team of University of Toronto engineers is unrolling the mysteries of cancer–literally. They have developed a way to grow cancer cells in the form of a rolled-up sheet that mimics the 3D environment of a tumor, yet can also be taken apart in seconds.

The platform, described in a new Nature Materials paper, offers a way to speed up the development of new drugs and therapies and ask new questions about how cancer cells behave.

The drawbacks of studying cancer cells in a traditional petri dish are well known. While cells in a tumor grow in three dimensions, the dish is only two-dimensional. Moreover, cells in the centre of a tumor have less access to oxygen and nutrients than those growing near the surface, close to the blood vessels.

These subtle, location-dependent differences have a big impact on cell behavior, but have proven difficult to replicate in a dish.

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