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Journal ArticleDOI

Oxygen diffusion distance and development of necrosis in multicell spheroids

Allan J. Franko, +1 more
- 01 Sep 1979 - 
- Vol. 79, Iss: 3, pp 439-453
TLDR
The multicell spheroid in vitro tumor model was used to study the effects of diffusion limitations of metabolites on the development of necrosis in a tumor-like environment and it was found that an unknown mechanism controls the formationmore » of Necrosis when the oxygen diffusion distance is less than approximately 80 ..mu..m.
Abstract
The multicell spheroid in vitro tumor model was used to study the effects of diffusion limitations of metabolites on the development of necrosis in a tumor-like environment. Chinese hamster V79-171b cells were grown in suspension as multicellular spheroids in different oxygen or glucose concentrations to diameters where they developed central necrosis surrounded by an outer rim of viable cells. The range of oxygen concentrations used in the gas phase was 1 to 20.3%, in equilibrium with complete nutrient medium. For each oxygen concentration the thickness of the rim of viable cells was determined from measurements of histological sections. The square of the thickness of the viable rims of spheroids grown at different oxygen concentrations between 5 and 20.3% increased linearly with the theoretically derived oxygen diffusion distance, showing that the oxygen diffusion distance is a main factor controlling, either directly or indirectly, the development of necrosis in this concentration range. The data were interpreted as meaning spheroids grown at more than 5% O/sub 2/ contain a very small proportion of cells which were severely hypoxic or anoxic. The viable rim thickness was relatively less affected during growth at less than 5% oxygen, implying that an unknown mechanism controls the formationmore » of necrosis when the oxygen diffusion distance is less than approximately 80 ..mu..m. Although alterations in the glucose concentration had some effect on viable rim thickness at these low oxygen concentrations, the effect was much less than expected if glucose alone were responsible for controlling viability in this outer region.« less

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Book ChapterDOI

Cell death: a new classification separating apoptosis from necrosis

TL;DR: In the past 20 years, studies of cell death have reflected differing philosophies as discussed by the authors, with some researchers viewing cell death as a strictly pathological process, arising only in abnormal circumstances and producing manifestations of disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multicellular spheroids. A review on cellular aggregates in cancer research.

TL;DR: Investigations of epigenetic mechanisms of the cellular microenvironment on basic biological properties of cancer cells, including the induction of proliferation gradients and quiescence, should be intensified in future research on cell aggregates.
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Regulation of Growth Saturation and Development of Necrosis in EMT6/Ro Multicellular Spheroids by the Glucose and Oxygen Supply

TL;DR: A model is presented to explain the observed spheroid growth characteristics by proposing a competition between externally supplied growth and viability-promoting factors and internally generated inhibitory factors produced by the process of necrosis, which has critical implications for the use of spheroids as models of cellular growth in tumors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three-dimensional spheroid model in tumor biology.

TL;DR: The multicellular tumor spheroid model, which is of intermediate complexity between in vivo tumors and monolayer cultures, was developed and the major similarities between spheroids and solid tumors are discussed.
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Contributions of Cell Metabolism and H+ Diffusion to the Acidic pH of Tumors

TL;DR: Tumors of MDA-mb-435 cells are significantly more acidic than are tumors of MCF-7/s cells, suggesting that tumor acidity is primarily caused by endogenous metabolism, and not the lack of oxygen.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Histological Structure of Some Human Lung Cancers and the Possible Implications for Radiotherapy

TL;DR: The Histological Structure of Some Human Lung Cancers and the Possible Implications for Radiotherapy as mentioned in this paper, and the possible implications for radiotherapy for lung cancer diagnosis and treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relation between cell proliferation and the vascular system in a transplanted mouse mammary tumour.

TL;DR: Author commentary of the process is included to cover anticipation of the patient surge, transport of critical patients, and communication across all agencies--interhospital, local, state, and federal.

Radiation response of multicell spheroids--an in vitro tumour model.

Sutherland Rm, +1 more
TL;DR: Multicell spheroids provide an in vitro tumour model of intermediate complexity between tumours and standard cell cultures and methods were developed to study in situ repair and repopulation processes after ionizing radiation or other cytotoxic agents.
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