Fluorescent
Molecular
Probe for Imaging Hypoxia in
2D Cell Culture Monolayers and 3D Tumor Spheroids: The Cell Membrane
Partition Model for Predicting Probe Distribution in a Spheroid
posted on 2025-03-13, 14:40authored byZhumin Zhang, Hailey S. Sanders, Vivienne Dragun, Sara Cole, Bradley D. Smith
Compared to cultured 2D cell monolayers,
3D multicellular
spheroids
are more realistic tumor models. Nonetheless, spheroids remain under-utilized
in preclinical research, in part, because there is a lack of fluorescence
sensors that can noninvasively interrogate all the individual cells
within a spheroid. This present study describes a deep-red fluorogenic
molecular probe for microscopic imaging of cells that contain a high
level of nitroreductase enzyme activity as a biomarker of cell hypoxia.
A first-generation version of the probe produced “turn-on”
fluorescence in a 2D cell monolayer under hypoxic conditions; however,
it was not useful in a 3D multicellular tumor spheroid because it
only accumulated in the peripheral cells. To guide the probe structural
optimization process, an intuitive theoretical membrane partition
model was conceived to predict how a dosed probe will distribute within
a 3D spheroid. The model identifies three limiting molecular diffusion
pathways that are determined by a probe’s membrane partition
properties. A lipophilic probe with high membrane affinity rapidly
becomes trapped in the membranes of the peripheral cells. In contrast,
a very hydrophilic probe molecule with negligible membrane affinity
diffuses rapidly through the spheroid intercellular space and rarely
enters the cells. However, a probe molecule with intermediate membrane
affinity undergoes sequential diffusion in and out of cells and distributes
to all the cells within a spheroid. Using the model as a predictive
tool, a second-generation fluorescent probe was prepared with a smaller
and more hydrophilic molecular structure, and optical sectioning using
structured illumination or light sheet microscopy revealed roughly
even probe diffusion throughout a tumor spheroid. The membrane permeation
model is likely to be broadly applicable for the structural optimization
of various classes of molecules and nanoparticles to enable even distribution
within a tumor spheroid.