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04 December 2024 | Story André Damons | Photo André Damons
Breast Cancer Research 2024
The research team consist of Dr Beynon Abrahams (left), Viwe Fokazi, MMed.Sci student, and PhD student Songezo Vazi.

In an effort to better understand chemotherapeutic treatment response in triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) – known as an aggressive cancer with high recurrence and high mortality rate in breast cancer patients – researchers from the University of the Free State (UFS) developed a drug-resistant TNBC spheroid model that is physiologically more accurate in displaying the complexities involved in drug-resistance development.

Dr Beynon Abrahams, Lecturer in the Department of Basic Medical Sciences within the UFS Faculty of Health Sciences, says breast cancer remains the most frequently diagnosed cancer in women. It is also the most debilitating type of cancer responsible for the highest cancer mortality rates in women. Though various subtypes of breast cancer exist, TNBC is one that is of particular interest to his research team.

“TNBC is one of the most difficult cancer types to treat, due to lack of treatment targets. This often leads to treatment failure in TNBC patients, with drug resistance being a common occurrence, contributing to high death rates. TNBC is classified based on its lack of expression of common receptors such as the estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor and human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, which are commonly expressed in other cancer subtypes.

“Characteristically, TNBC is known as an aggressive cancer with high metastatic potential (spreading of cancer), resulting in a poor prognosis for these patients. The current prescribed therapies for TNBC, entails multidrug combination systemic therapy including chemotherapeutic agents such as doxorubicin and cisplatin as adjuvant therapy. However, despite these therapeutic interventions, drug resistance is a common occurrence,” says Dr Abrahams.

The best available preclinical cell-based models should be used

For effective drug treatments to be developed for TNBC therapeutics, he continues, the best available disease models should be used to not only improve our understanding of the disease physiology and its numerous mechanisms involved in chemotherapeutic resistance development but also to provide accurate results when determining how safe and effective newly developed drugs are, before they may be considered for further development and testing on humans.

According to him, in preclinical cancer research the conventional methods employed to study disease mechanisms, drug action and drug resistance is ineffective. Firstly, the traditionally used preclinical 2-dimensional (2-D) cell culture models do not accurately recapitulate the architectural biology observed in vivo, second, the drug responses assessed in these models may provide inaccurate results and limit its translational potential, explains Dr Abrahams. Thus, more advanced cell-based models such as 3-dimensional (3-D) spheroids and organoids to name a few, should be considered as alternatives.

The UFS research team, in collaboration with the Centre of Excellence for Pharmaceutical Sciences (Pharmacen™) at the North-West University (NWU), recently took the undertaking to establish two triple negative breast cancer 3-D spheroid models, using the clinostat rotating bioreactor ClinoStar™ system, designed by CelVivo in Denmark. The project is funded by the National Research Foundation.

The ClinoStar™ system promotes the self-aggregation of single cells, and natural formation of 3-D spheroids, through slow rotation within a cell growth chamber known as an incubator. There are various techniques and methods available to develop spheroids and organoids, however the ClinoStar™ systems allow for the development of metabolically stable spheroids, over a longer period of time, as opposed to other methods. It also eliminates the sheer-stress conditions that are normally encountered when using 2-D cell culture models.

“We successfully established one chemotherapeutic-sensitive triple negative breast cancer spheroid model and one novel cisplatin-resistant triple negative breast cancer spheroid model. The chemo-sensitive TNBC spheroid model was evaluated for responsiveness against two clinically used chemotherapeutic agents, doxorubicin and cisplatin. We suggest that this model may be useful to screen novel compounds including traditionally used phytomedicinal material for anticancer activity.

“In our second model, the cisplatin-resistant TNBC spheroid model was also exposed to cisplatin and doxorubicin and demonstrated a resistant response in terms of growth and viability. We believe that this model may be useful to further explore drug resistance mechanisms and may also be used as a tool to assess the drug reversal potential of novel compounds. The value and impact of these models lies in that they may offer predictive drug responses that are closer to that observed in in vivo (animals), as opposed to 2-D cell cultures. This however needs to be assessed. We are currently in the process to fully characterise these spheroids models.”

Aim of the research

Dr Abrahams explains their research aims to merge the gap between conventionally used 2-D cell models and in vivo models, by providing a model that is physiologically more accurate in mimicking the in vivo conditions and complex pathways associated with drug resistance, which is otherwise not observed or accurately expressed in 2D models. “Although our research is preclinical and considered fundamental basic research, the translational potential of our spheroid models may provide options for exploring and testing alternative drugs that may be considered for translational research,” Dr Abrahams says.

Characterising other advanced cell-based cancer models

The team is currently in the process of further characterising the TNBC spheroid model based on protein and genetic expression profiles to elucidate potential therapeutic biomarkers for drug treatment as well as screening various phytomedicinal plants, to assess their antiproliferative and drug-resistance reversal potential. In addition, the researchers recently commenced a new research project that aims to develop a drug-resistant prostate cancer spheroid model using the Clinostar™ system with their collaborators at the NWU.

Advanced cell-based model research is still relatively ‘new’ in South Africa and Africa, compared to the global North. As a result, says Dr Abrahams, their NWU collaborators together with other stakeholders, initiated the establishment of the Society for Advanced Cell Culture Modelling for Africa (SACCMA) in 2021, which aims to develop the fields of advanced cell modelling, three-dimensional (3D) cell cultures, 3D bioprinting and stem cell research, in Africa. Our current inter-departmental  collaboration include researchers from the Pharmacology department, but we hope to build and expand our collaboration network in the near future.

News Archive

Students excel in legal interpreting programme
2010-02-24

Prof. Ezekiel Moraka, Vice-Rector: External Relations at the UFS with one of the students who received a diploma.
Photo: Mangaliso Radebe


A success rate of 90% was achieved by the first group of 100 students that successfully completed the two-year Diploma in Legal Interpreting at the University of the Free State (UFS).

The group recently received their diplomas at the ceremony held on the Main Campus in Bloemfontein.

The programme, offered by the university’s Department of Afroasiatic Studies, Sign Language and Language Practice, in collaboration with the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development and Safety and Security Sector Education and Training Authority (SASSETA), is the only one of its kind in South Africa.

“The numbers that we are talking about here, if one looks at the needs of the country as such, is a small fraction,” said Advocate Simon Jiyane, Deputy Director General: Court Services in the Department of Justice.

“This is our first programme in collaboration with the UFS and I am hopeful it will lay a very solid foundation for other such programmes to follow.”

The diplomas were conferred by Prof. Ezekiel Moraka, Vice-Rector: External Relations at the UFS, on behalf of the Rector and Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Jonathan Jansen.

He urged the students to use their skills as qualified court interpreters in the context of the challenges that face South Africa such as HIV/Aids, racism, transformation, unemployment, poverty, job losses, and many other such challenges.

“This is the reality we are faced with, all of us,” he said. “It requires skilful and morally upright people to address it adequately and effectively. You are adding up to the number of skilful people in our country and that means you have a critical role to play.”

He said the UFS, as a societal structure, is equally affected by those challenges because of being accountable to and economically dependent on society.

He also urged the students to use their skills to make contributions to the processes of transformation that are underway at the UFS.

“For instance, the UFS as a national asset has to transform to that level of being a true national asset. We need your full participation in this process so that we can together ensure the relevance of this university as a true South African university,” he said.

Advocate Jiyane urged universities to also look at some of the initiatives that the government takes to improve service delivery. One such initiative is a pilot project focusing on the use of indigenous languages in courts.

“Its aim is to ensure that our courts begin to recognise all official languages in terms of conducting their business,” he said.

“It is our responsibility as a department that, through this project, we begin to build those languages so that they are on a par with the other languages that are being utilised in our courts.”

The department has permanently employed two of the students who received their diplomas, while one of them, Ms Nombulelo Esta Meki, was awarded a bursary by SASSETA to study for a BA in Legal Interpreting. Ms Meki was the top achiever of the programme with an average of 86%.

Media Release:
Mangaliso Radebe
Assistant Director: Media Liaison
Tel: 051 401 2828
Cell: 078 460 3320
E-mail: radebemt@ufs.ac.za  
3 March 2010

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