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https://hdl.handle.net/2183/47015 Deciphering the interaction between osteosarcoma and mesenchymal stem cells in a 3D bone-mimetic co-culture model
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Bassi, Giada
Saqawa, Mohamed
Apolloni, Lorenzo
Ollivier, Emilie
Levergeois, Romain
Sandri, Monica
Campodoni, Elisabetta
Cochonneau, Denis
Panseri, Silvia
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Bassi G, Saqawa M, Apolloni L, Díaz-Prado S, Ollivier E, Levergeois R, Sandri M, Campodoni E, Cochonneau D, Panseri S, Heymann D, Montesi M. Deciphering the interaction between osteosarcoma and mesenchymal stem cells in a 3D bone-mimetic co-culture model. Biomed Pharmacother. 2026 Jan 6;195:118956.
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Abstract
[Abstract] Osteosarcoma (OS) is a highly heterogeneous and aggressive bone malignancy whose complexity is strongly influenced by its Tumor Microenvironment (TME). Within this niche, Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs) play a pivotal role in tumor progression by undergoing phenotypic and functional reprogramming under tumor-derived cues, acquiring Cancer-Associated Fibroblast (CAF)-like features that promote proliferation, invasion, and immune evasion. The Extracellular Matrix (ECM), once regarded as a passive structural element, is now recognized as an active regulator of tumor behavior, acting as a reservoir of signaling molecules and a modulator of cell fate. However, the molecular crosstalk between OS cells, MSCs, and the ECM remains poorly understood, largely due to the limitations of conventional two-dimensional models. In this study, we established a three-dimensional (3D) bone-mimetic model of osteosarcoma (mOS-3D) by co-culturing human OS cells and MSCs within a hydroxyapatite-collagen (MgHA/Coll) scaffold that recapitulates the biochemical and structural features of native bone ECM. This in vitro platform reproduces key aspects of the OS microenvironment, enabling the investigation of tumor-stroma interactions and their impact on stemness, stromal activation, and ECM remodeling. The mOS-3D model provides a physiologically relevant and tunable system for studying the cellular mechanisms driving OS progression and offers a promising preclinical tool to explore therapeutic strategies targeting the TME.
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