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1 ructures with less physiological relevance ('spheroids').
2 egulates the transport of compounds into the spheroid.
3  by a rapid diffusion into the center of the spheroid.
4 for proliferation and survival in lung tumor spheroids.
5 derm spheroids and stepwise into hepatoblast spheroids.
6 opatterned substrates induces stem-cell-like spheroids.
7  and increased dissociation from organotypic spheroids.
8 wn in 2D culture and further demonstrated in spheroids.
9 of MMAE being similar against monolayers and spheroids.
10 rsed-settled cells are representative of the spheroids.
11  screening of anti-cancer drugs in 3D tumour spheroids.
12 the total contractility of arbitrarily sized spheroids.
13  cells obtained from cultured ovarian cancer spheroids.
14 o-dimensional cultures and three-dimensional spheroids.
15 -10 Gy) and/or heated (0-240 CEM(43)) HCT116 spheroids.
16 ced the size and morphology of cardiomyocyte spheroids.
17 riety of metabolites in different regions of spheroids.
18 I and IV) to drive the formation of the cell spheroids.
19 e penetration in ex vivo tumor multicellular spheroids.
20 ndogenous metabolites in breast cancer MCF-7 spheroids.
21 tides are indispensable for forming the cell spheroids.
22 arried out in a microsystem on multicellular spheroids.
23 he iA process leads to the formation of cell spheroids.
24 rimental measurements of multicellular tumor spheroids.
25  in favor of single MECs migrating away from spheroids.
26  ignore the complex structural properties of spheroids.
27 ass content of individual cell nuclei within spheroids.
28  screens in 2D monolayers and 3D lung-cancer spheroids.
29 ized to examine nanoparticle behavior in the spheroids.
30 on in hypoxic regions of human oligocortical spheroids.
31 s throughout the entire z-axis of individual spheroids.
32 l motility when cultured with fibroblasts in spheroids.
33 r cells as well as in 3D multicellular tumor spheroids.
34                      Using co-cultured tumor spheroids (1:1 mixture of metastatic and non-tumorigenic
35 nhances the sprouting and migration of tumor spheroids, (2) promotes angiogenesis, (3) facilitates va
36 d to a hollow spheroidal cage [4] to a solid spheroid [5] but has largely evaded description and inte
37 r the efficient patterning of cardiovascular spheroids after mesoderm formation from hPSCs.
38 e being observed throughout the depth of the spheroids, although emission intensity still drops off t
39 ltiple therapeutic treatments (n = 690 total spheroids analysed).
40 ing and cell-cell communications on cortical spheroid and organoid patterning.
41 wth of neurites from both PC12 multicellular spheroids and chick embryonic dorsal root ganglia bodies
42 matrix remodeling in the case of mesenchymal spheroids and different modes of cell migration.
43 pact (66 Ma) event resulted in deposition of spheroids and melt glass, followed by deposition of diam
44 ived from spheroids are compared to those of spheroids and monolayers in order to find if the dispers
45 y adding microbeads to the surface of tumour spheroids and observing the distribution over time.
46 ured HR(+) breast cancer and prostate cancer spheroids and patient-derived organoids in 3D extracellu
47         Adult-onset leukoencephalopathy with spheroids and pigmented glia (ALSP) is an autosomal domi
48 d to droplets of phloem sap containing amber spheroids and preserving both organic and inorganic resi
49  growth of breast cancer and prostate cancer spheroids and restored lumen filling in the presence of
50  treatment enhanced growth of Rgnef-knockout spheroids and Rgnef re-expression facilitated NF-kappaB-
51 tiated in 3 dimensions into hepatic endoderm spheroids and stepwise into hepatoblast spheroids.
52 estinal epithelial phenotype occur faster in spheroids and that they are viable for a longer period o
53 ells in the peritoneal cavity as nonadherent spheroids and their adherence to the mesothelium of dist
54 tudy is to investigate the impacts of neural spheroids and vascular spheroids interactions on the reg
55 anisms by which injury leads to formation of spheroids and whether these spheroids have a functional
56 ements of mechanical forces in multicellular spheroids and zebrafish embryonic tissues.
57 riations in cell volume within multicellular spheroids and, further, describe how the process depends
58  were enriched in ALDH(+) cells, formed more spheroids, and expressed increased levels of stemness-re
59 ssemination, induced cortical actin belts in spheroids, and slowed retrograde actin flow.
60  of the dispersed-settled cells derived from spheroids are compared to those of spheroids and monolay
61 diversify when clonal three-dimensional (3D) spheroids are cultured in basement membrane, and one suc
62                 CRISPR screens revealed that spheroids are differentially dependent on the mammalian
63  develop a microfluidic model in which tumor spheroids are embedded within 3D collagen matrices with
64 interactions and cell growth kinetics in the spheroids are similar to the early stage of a nonvascula
65  the production of a dynamic system in which spheroids are subjected to in vivo like fluid flow and s
66                                     However, spheroids are typically handled in well-plates in which
67         Our results suggest that HMT-3522 S1 spheroids are useful as an in vitro model system to stud
68                                   Hepatocyte spheroids are useful models for mimicking liver phenotyp
69                                       Tumour spheroids are widely used as an in vitro assay for chara
70 llular spheroids (hereinafter referred to as spheroids) are 3D biological models.
71 Our approach utilizes cultured multicellular spheroids as a 3D cell model and cultured cell monolayer
72 models of microbead infiltration into tumour spheroids as they rely on resolving the trajectories of
73                                 The proposed spheroid-based approach for validation of CRRC is applic
74  causes proliferation to be localised at the spheroid boundary.
75 , we were able to invert the polarity of the spheroids by culturing them around Matrigel beads allowi
76 is of tissue sections from 3D cell cultures (spheroids) by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionizatio
77 lture systems, uncovering a vulnerability of spheroid cancer cells deprived of extracellular matrix t
78 ommunities to produce discrete multicellular spheroids capable of both aerobic (oxygen producing) and
79 e present a series of studies utilizing lung spheroid cell-secretome (LSC-Sec) and exosomes (LSC-Exo)
80          As the spheroid grows, cells at the spheroid centre may become hypoxic and die, forming a ne
81                                This bacteria-spheroid co-culture model enables mechanistic investigat
82               Here, we present a bacteria-in-spheroid coculture (BSCC) platform that simultaneously t
83 uantifying the contractile forces that tumor spheroids collectively exert on highly nonlinear three-d
84 ucted by Dorie et al. could be used to infer spheroid composition and parameters associated with tumo
85                                          The spheroids consist of three cell types (cancer, fibroblas
86    Our results indicate that culturing tumor spheroids containing MDA-MB-231 cells + HUVECs in an HLF
87 erive a scale-invariant relationship between spheroid contractility and the surrounding matrix deform
88 ls exposed to tumor-like metabolic stress in spheroid culture activated the mevalonate pathway to pro
89  bottlenecks to the automation of hepatocyte spheroid culture by tethering 3D hepatocyte spheroids di
90                      PrSPCs were enriched by spheroid culture from normal human primary or immortaliz
91        These results illustrate the value of spheroid culture in revealing environmental or spatial d
92 ese models is enhanced by high throughput 3D spheroid culture technologies allowing researchers to ef
93 d apoptosis in p53-deficient cancer cells in spheroid culture.
94 relatively small (~100) number of hepatocyte spheroids cultured in a microfluidic device.
95                                           3D spheroid cultures allow for the production of multicellu
96 form which allows the facile manipulation of spheroid cultures on a large scale severely limits their
97               The hypoxic environment in the spheroid cultures recruited more T cells compared with d
98 (PDLF) and the gingiva (GF) in monolayer and spheroid cultures were exposed to hypoxia or l-mimosine.
99                               In PDLF and GF spheroid cultures, the impact of hypoxia and l-mimosine
100 g cholangiocyte culture and 3D cholangiocyte spheroid cultures, we found that biliatresone and decrea
101 rcinoma, EGFR-TKIs show enhanced efficacy in spheroid cultures.
102 ynergized with EGFR-TKI treatment only in 3D spheroid cultures.
103  accumulation and ROS formation at 40-60 mum spheroid depths were found to be the key factors for the
104                                              Spheroids derived from DCLK1-overexpressing hepatoma cel
105                         We used 3-D cortical spheroids derived from human induced pluripotent stem ce
106 nal brain-like tissue patterning in cortical spheroids derived from human iPSCs.
107 rs, 033-F had notably weaker potency against spheroids despite potency levels of MMAE being similar a
108  spheroid culture by tethering 3D hepatocyte spheroids directly onto surface-modified polystyrene (PS
109                             Multicellular 3D spheroids display reproducible BBB features and function
110 f the clinically tested drug perifosine into spheroids during a 24 h period, revealing the fraction o
111 usable, bioengineered blood vessel and tumor spheroids embedded in an extracellular matrix (ECM).
112 ors in mice, despite overexpression of ZIP4; spheroids established from these cells had increased sen
113 ow that three-dimensional (3D) multicellular spheroids established with malignant glioma cells, unlik
114    Compared to 2D culture, 3D cardiovascular spheroids exhibited higher levels of sarcomeric striatio
115 iodistribution data, tumor histology images, spheroid experiments, in vivo single-cell measurements,
116 ng liposomes to the outer cell layers of the spheroids, followed by doxorubicin release into the deep
117 ration associated with injury is preceded by spheroid formation along axons.
118 r expressing WLD(s) suppresses Rho-dependent spheroid formation and degeneration in response to injur
119 ule BDP9066 decreased cell proliferation and spheroid formation and induced apoptosis in HGSOC cells,
120 22R-expressing PDAC cells with IL22 promoted spheroid formation and invasive activity, resulting in i
121 dings place Rho-actin and NAD(+) upstream of spheroid formation and may suggest that other mediators
122 ls that survived exhibited stemness markers, spheroid formation and tumorigenesis in Balb/c nude mice
123                  Knockdown of NRF2 inhibited spheroid formation by driving PrSPC differentiation, whe
124 d the ability of PTEN variants to rescue the spheroid formation phenotype of PTEN(-/-) MCF10A cells m
125 ; we evaluated cell migration, invasion, and spheroid formation under hypoxic and normoxic conditions
126  improved sensitivity to platinum, decreased spheroid formation, and delayed tumor initiation.
127 n and underlying mechanisms governing axonal spheroid formation, however, remain unclear.
128 w that ACTL6A drives SCC cell proliferation, spheroid formation, invasion and migration, and that the
129  of Wallerian degeneration in injury-induced spheroid formation.
130 enfluridol and analyzed in proliferation and spheroid formation.
131                 Here, the response of tumour spheroids formed from two established human cancer cell
132                        Here, we investigated spheroid-forming cells in a metastatic TNBC model.
133 g of fibronectin, thus enabling formation of spheroids from a monolayer of cells.
134 drop fusion model: the fusion was faster for spheroids from epithelial cells with lower apparent surf
135 h structure and mechanical properties of the spheroids from human somatic cells of different phenotyp
136 the development of more realistic models for spheroid fusion that would further provide a helpful too
137 based biosensor relies on immobilized HEK293 spheroids genetically engineered with powerful red- and
138 gely due to the reproducible manner in which spheroids grow: the diffusion of nutrients and oxygen fr
139 n in both cell culture and three-dimensional spheroids grown from primary tumors.
140                                       As the spheroid grows, cells at the spheroid centre may become
141 imal growth at <0.5 mm glutamine, with tumor spheroid growth and monolayer migration of 143B ASCT2ko
142                         However, tracking of spheroid growth and treatment-induced volume reduction h
143 ts and that depletion of talin1 inhibited 3D spheroid growth in colon cancer cells.
144 proliferation, it significantly inhibited 3D spheroid growth in fibrin gel assays.
145                     Moreover, UL33 increased spheroid growth in vitro and accelerated tumor growth in
146 s antagonized TOPflash reporter activity and spheroid growth in vitro and elevated Wnt-inhibitory fac
147            The mathematical model for tumour spheroid growth is parameterised by multicellular tumour
148 naling intermediate SOS1 was required for 3D spheroid growth of EGFR-mutated NSCLC cells.
149                     In conclusion, 3D tumour spheroid growth studies reveal differences in response t
150 cell cycle progression, colony formation, 3D spheroid growth, and tumor xenograft growth in mice.
151            Response was analysed in terms of spheroid growth, cell viability and the distribution of
152 gate deoxysphingolipid synthesis and improve spheroid growth, similar to phenotypes observed with the
153 ib blocked PI3K/AKT activation and inhibited spheroid growth, suggesting an essential role for the PI
154 PRK2) and their depletion results in reduced spheroid growth.
155 significantly reduces cell proliferation and spheroid growth.
156 erentiation, whereas its activation enhanced spheroid growth.
157 uces microenvironmental changes that promote spheroid growth.
158                    In addition, tri-cultured spheroids had high levels of TBR1 (deep cortical layer V
159  to formation of spheroids and whether these spheroids have a functional role in degeneration remain
160                                       Tumour spheroids have a microenvironment that more closely rese
161                          Multicellular tumor spheroids have been increasingly used by researchers to
162                          The cell aggregates-spheroids-have become widely used model objects in the s
163  hereditary diffuse leukoencephalopathy with spheroids (HDLS), an adult-onset progressive neurodegene
164                                Multicellular spheroids (hereinafter referred to as spheroids) are 3D
165 dy, we embedded these partially reprogrammed spheroids in collagen-I matrices of varying densities, m
166                                              Spheroids in individual zones fused and the maintenance
167 r microenvironment (TME) and ascites-derived spheroids in ovarian cancer (OC) facilitate tumor growth
168  efficient histological analysis of up to 96 spheroids in parallel.
169 rexpressing primary human hepatocytes formed spheroids in suspension cultures.
170 tion of CD8(+) T lymphocytes with tumor cell spheroids in vitro induced a similar phenotype, supporti
171 ired proliferation, and an inability to form spheroids in vitro, while in vivo they generated highly
172 h delay in vivo; they also formed smaller 3D spheroids in vitro.
173 ent cellular uptake in monolayers and tumour spheroids, including when assessed in co-cultures of TNB
174 ckout of Adamts9 in IMCD3 cells, followed by spheroid induction, resulted in defective lumen formatio
175  physiologically realistic model using tumor spheroids instead of single cells under perfusion.
176 the impacts of neural spheroids and vascular spheroids interactions on the regional brain-like tissue
177  behind the development of 3D cardiovascular spheroids into either vascular or cardiac cells has not
178 n both Boyden chamber and 3D hyaluronic acid spheroid invasion assays.
179 r cells also inhibited cell migration and 3D spheroid invasion.
180  of maintaining the coherence of chondrocyte spheroids, leading to a larger quantity of CD44 (by immu
181 load from 033-F was reduced in higher volume spheroids, likely contributing to the potency difference
182                                       Tissue spheroids, made of human adipose-derived stem cells (ADS
183                                    While the spheroids' magnetization orientation is consistent with
184                                   Irradiated spheroids maintained a dense structure and exhibited a l
185 models, we developed 3D multicellular tumour spheroids (MCs) as an intermediate step to bridge the ga
186 wth is parameterised by multicellular tumour spheroid (MCTS) data.
187                          Multicellular tumor spheroid (MCTS) systems provide an in vitro cell culture
188 odel by varying the composition of the tumor spheroids (MDA-MB-231 breast tumor cells + mesenchymal s
189 sembles biofilm-like structures in the tumor spheroid microenvironment, whereas heat-killed F. nuclea
190            Here we devised a scalable cancer-spheroid model and performed genome-wide CRISPR screens
191 nce to therapeutics can be integrated into a spheroid model and tracked over time by automated imagin
192 he development of a 3-dimensional (3D) tumor spheroid model that can harbor and promote the growth of
193 el in-vitro 3D human adipocyte/pre-adipocyte spheroid model, we investigated whether adipocytes and t
194             Combined three-dimensional tumor spheroid modeling and machine learning classifies PTEN m
195 xperimentally validated in three-dimensional spheroid models and established uncharacterized crosstal
196                    Here, utilizing 3D cancer spheroid models coupled with CRISPR-Cas9 screens, we inv
197 h 2D cell culture and 3D multicellular tumor spheroid models of pancreatic cancer.
198 study of large cell collectives, such as the spheroid models prevalent in mechanobiology.
199 dvancement in the application of 3D tethered spheroid models to high throughput drug screening.
200 on-resistant prostate cancer cell (CRPC) and spheroid models.
201                  Drug treatment of 3D cancer spheroids more accurately reflects in vivo therapeutic r
202  as well as autophagic response and restored spheroid morphology.
203  reveals intricate 3D organizations of tumor spheroids, mouse brain tissues, and tumor xenografts.
204 patic 3D model with primary human hepatocyte spheroids, nitrite treatment reduced the degree of metab
205 MLNPs showed the highest efficacy against 3D spheroids of TNBC, in addition the MLNPs also induced hi
206 ccurate positioning of a layer of osteogenic spheroids onto a sacrificial alginate support followed b
207                                Current brain spheroids or organoids derived from human induced plurip
208 cancer spheroids, revealing advantages of 3D spheroids over 2D monolayers, wherein novel therapeutic
209  of engineered bacteria within multicellular spheroids over a timescale of weeks.
210 creasing cell death was observed in the HT29 spheroids over the five-day period.
211 gulation, and targeting NRF2 and GPX4 killed spheroids overall.
212 rt followed by another layer of chondrogenic spheroids overlaid by the same support.
213                     Collectively, this novel spheroid platform will enable high-throughput anti-cance
214              The metabolomic profiles inside spheroids provide crucial information reflecting the mol
215 ure and exhibited a longer growth delay than spheroids receiving hyperthermia or combination treatmen
216  demonstrate that collective forces of tumor spheroids reflect the contractility of individual cells
217 n response to such matrix constraints, these spheroids regained their fibroblastic properties and spr
218 rsion as, in both cases, a subset of mammary spheroids remained insensitive to local matrix stiffness
219 ubicin release into the deeper layers of the spheroids, resulting in a significant reduction in cell
220                    Distinctly, MCF7 and T47D spheroids retained ER protein expression in cocultures b
221 duction studies) of the polystyrene tethered spheroids reveal significant improvements over hepatocyt
222 repeats (CRISPR) screening in 3D lung cancer spheroids, revealing advantages of 3D spheroids over 2D
223 es an cellular flow of tumour cells from the spheroid rim towards its core.
224 eration, such as DR6 and SARM1, mediate post-spheroid rupture events that lead to catastrophic axon d
225 d media collected from wild-type axons after spheroid rupture.
226 s degeneration during development via axonal spheroid rupture.
227 followed by IHC analysis on exactly the same spheroid section.
228                      Furthermore chondrocyte spheroids, seeded on top of gels that contained either M
229 -135 kills low-passage patient-derived tumor spheroids selectively over surrounding cancer-associated
230 es exhibit liquid-like properties, including spheroid shapes due to surface tension, fluidity due to
231 th when exposed to heat or radiation: heated spheroids shed dead cells within four days of heating an
232                                              Spheroids showed different patterns of shrinkage and reg
233         Additionally, the core of the larger spheroids showed more resiliency towards microtubule inh
234 mation and cell migration, alterations of 3D-spheroid size and shape as well as retardation of cell c
235                                              Spheroid size distribution after 15 days was in the diam
236 there is not yet a robust way of controlling spheroid size, homogeneity and integrity during extended
237 ctions at the highest concentrations for all spheroid sizes.
238 s of large asteroid disruptions, that oblate spheroids, some of which have a pronounced equator defin
239 ion of PI3Kbeta reduced PD-RCC-stimulated EC spheroid sprouting.
240 sis activity in two-dimensional cells, tumor spheroids, subcutaneous transplantation mouse models, an
241 est result with human neural progenitor cell spheroids suggests a remarkable reduction in histology p
242 into tumour spheroids via advection from the spheroid surface, by adding microbeads to the surface of
243 'skin', only a few cell layers thick, at the spheroid surface, which correlates with activation of me
244 oids was investigated and confirmed that the spheroid takes up the complex.
245 onding 250-fold proliferative advantage over spheroid technologies.
246 xicant treatment on functional 3D hepatocyte spheroids tethered directly on polystyrene multi-well pl
247 ctive RGD and galactose ligands required for spheroid tethering and formation.
248 -Rho dependent growth of calcium rich axonal spheroids that eventually rupture, releasing material to
249 cess NAD(+)) neurons, are capable of forming spheroids that eventually rupture, releasing their conte
250 iments were then carried out in human cancer spheroids that provide a realistic tumor model for the d
251 ew differentiation method to generate kidney spheroids that structurally recapitulate important featu
252 inetic parameters associated with the tumour spheroids that they infiltrate.
253 elial changes accompany a previously unknown spheroid to lentoid shape transition of the lens as dete
254 ly drive flow through the system and subject spheroids to capillary like flow velocities.
255 e we exploit the spherical symmetry of tumor spheroids to derive a scale-invariant relationship betwe
256 and assemble them with human skeletal muscle spheroids to generate 3D cortico-motor assembloids.
257 ced by UPR induction, and resensitized tumor spheroids to proteasome inhibition both in vitro and in
258 le strategy for performing CRISPR screens in spheroids to reveal cancer vulnerabilities.
259 on of volumetric in-vitro tumour tissue (SAS spheroids) to demonstrate concurrent operation of laser
260 neage cells derived in human oligodendrocyte spheroids transitioned through developmental stages simi
261 a microfluidic device containing an array of spheroid traps, into which multiple pre-grown colorectal
262 ese experiments revealed that, in irradiated spheroids treated with 1(4+), acute and rapid photoinduc
263 aging or optogenetic stimulation of cortical spheroids triggers robust contraction of 3D muscle, and
264  researchers to efficiently culture numerous spheroids under varied experimental conditions.
265                         Interestingly, these spheroids undergo a complex maturation process reminisce
266                                    After the spheroids underwent hypoxia (0.1% O(2); 24 h), the BBB w
267                                          The spheroids used here were composed of six brain cell type
268 ration of free-floating 3D posterior foregut spheroids using FGF4, Wnt pathway agonist CHIR99021 (CHI
269 inert microspheres to infiltrate into tumour spheroids via advection from the spheroid surface, by ad
270 of 3 muM doxorubicin (DOX) + MB + US reduced spheroid viability to 48 +/- 2%, compared to 75 +/- 5% o
271 mes (DOX-LS) were conjugated to MBs, reduced spheroid viability to 62 +/- 3%, a decrease compared to
272 s fact contributed to the reduction of tumor spheroids viability and size.
273 owered potency towards spheroids with 033-F, spheroid volume was still readily reduced by 033-F in a
274 ity within the deeper, hypoxic layers of the spheroids was also investigated.
275  complex as a probe, its uptake into 280 mum spheroids was investigated and confirmed that the sphero
276 r down-regulated, the biliatresone effect on spheroids was phenocopied, resulting in lumen obstructio
277 on in MCF-7 cells and three-dimensional (3D) spheroids was proven using the Pt-nanoelectrode.
278     It was found that sensitivity to heat in spheroids was significantly less than that seen in monol
279 nto large (>500 mum) multicellular 3D tissue spheroids was studied using a multimodal imaging approac
280           When Gd-MSN was added to the tumor spheroids, we observed efficient uptake and uniform dist
281 reatic spheroids were established; cells and spheroids were analyzed by immunoblots, reverse transcri
282                                Single hybrid spheroids were constructed at different iNPC: iEC: MSC r
283 Sox2-expressing skin-derived precursor (SKP) spheroids were cultured from murine back skin.
284  drug on the spatially resolved metabolites, spheroids were cultured using HCT-116 colorectal cancer
285 C and KPC-ZEB1-knockout mice, and pancreatic spheroids were established; cells and spheroids were ana
286 T29 cells were seeded into the device and 3D spheroids were generated and cultured through the perfus
287                                          The spheroids were generated by co-culturing pancreatic canc
288 h multiple pre-grown colorectal cancer (CRC) spheroids were loaded.
289                                  Hepatoblast spheroids were reseeded in a high-throughput format and
290                                              Spheroids were treated with 5-Fluorouracil for five days
291          Following the initial growth phase, spheroids were treated with auristatin as small molecule
292 articles readily entered the interior of the spheroid, whereas the dissolved dye alone did not penetr
293 nsions (3D) into chondrogenic and osteogenic spheroids, which were confirmed by immunostaining and hi
294 ugal neurons project and connect with spinal spheroids, while spinal-derived motor neurons connect wi
295              Despite lowered potency towards spheroids with 033-F, spheroid volume was still readily
296  approach is used to synthesize well-defined spheroids with controlled composition and morphology.
297 pparent surface tension than for mesenchymal spheroids with higher surface tension.
298 ation or sensitivity to hypoxia, can produce spheroids with similar bulk growth dynamics but differin
299 portantly, treatment of polystyrene tethered spheroids with vehicle and paradigm hepatotoxicant (chlo
300 taneously form acini (also known as cysts or spheroids) with a single, fluid-filled central lumen whe

 
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