Liposomal drug delivery in an in vitro 3D bone marrow model for multiple myeloma

Publication date

2018-11-29

Authors

Braham, Maaike Vj
Deshantri, Anil KISNI 0000000443879561
Minnema, Monique C
Öner, F Cumhur
Schiffelers, RaymondISNI 0000000045237985
Fens, Marcel HISNI 0000000387629137
Alblas, Jacqueline

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc

Abstract

Purpose: Liposomal drug delivery can improve the therapeutic index of treatments for multiple myeloma. However, an appropriate 3D model for the in vitro evaluation of liposomal drug delivery is lacking. In this study, we applied a previously developed 3D bone marrow (BM) myeloma model to examine liposomal drug therapy. Material and methods: Liposomes of different sizes (~75-200 nm) were tested in a 3D BM myeloma model, based on multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells, endothelial progenitor cells, and myeloma cells cocultured in hydrogel. The behavior and efficacy of liposomal drug therapy was investigated, evaluating the feasibility of testing liposomal drug delivery in 3D in vitro. Intracellular uptake of untargeted and integrin α4β1 (very late antigen-4) targeted liposomes was compared in myeloma and supporting cells, as well as the effectivity of free and liposome-encapsulated chemotherapy (bortezomib, doxorubicin). Either cocultured myeloma cell lines or primary CD138+ myeloma cells received the treatments. Results: Liposomes (~75-110 nm) passively diffused throughout the heterogeneously porous (~80-850 nm) 3D hydrogel model after insertion. Cellular uptake of liposomes was observed and was increased by targeting very late antigen-4. Liposomal bortezomib and doxorubicin showed increased cytotoxic effects toward myeloma cells compared with the free drugs, using either a cell line or primary myeloma cells. Cytotoxicity toward supporting BM cells was reduced using liposomes. Conclusion: The 3D model allows the study of liposome-encapsulated molecules on multiple myeloma and supporting BM cells, looking at cellular targeting, and general efficacy of the given therapy. The advantages of liposomal drug delivery were demonstrated in a primary myeloma model, enabling the study of patient-to-patient responses to potential drugs and treatment regimes.

Keywords

Antibiotics, Antineoplastic/administration & dosage, Bone Marrow/drug effects, Cell Proliferation, Doxorubicin/administration & dosage, Drug Delivery Systems, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Liposomes/administration & dosage, Models, Biological, Multiple Myeloma/drug therapy, Tumor Cells, Cultured

Citation

Braham, M V, Deshantri, A K, Minnema, M C, Öner, F C, Schiffelers, R M, Fens, M H & Alblas, J 2018, 'Liposomal drug delivery in an in vitro 3D bone marrow model for multiple myeloma', International Journal of Nanomedicine, vol. 13, pp. 8105-8118. https://doi.org/10.2147/IJN.S184262