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Explore groundbreaking research on patient-derived glioblastoma and gliosarcoma models for cancer research with these selected publications. Learn about glioblastoma culture, discover applications of glioblastoma organoid models, and easily add necessary reagents to your cart to replicate these experiments. For detailed, step-by-step experimental procedures, please refer to the original published protocols cited below.
Glioblastoma and gliosarcoma organoid protocols: How to order
These publications outline the generation of glioblastoma organoids (GBOs) and gliosarcoma organoids (GSOs) from patient-derived tumor tissue using a conserved culture medium formulation. Jacob et al. (2019, 2020) established a GBO model that recapitulates the histological features, cellular diversity, gene expression, and mutational profiles of parental tumors, providing a powerful platform for studying tumor biology and for use in drug screening. A follow-up study (Logun et al., 2025) demonstrated how these GBOs can be used to study the bioactivity of autologous CAR-T cells. In a separate study (Park et al., 2025), this method was used to generate gliosarcoma organoids.
Efficiency and reproducibility
Biological relevance
Biobanking compatibility
Drug discovery and screening
The GLICO (Cerebral Organoid Glioma) model involves co-culturing patient-derived glioblastoma cells with human cerebral organoids to create a 3D system that recapitulates key features of glioblastoma pathology. In this model, glioblastoma cells are microinjected into mature cerebral organoids, where they invade, proliferate, and establish interconnected networks via microtubules, mimicking the invasive behavior observed in patients. This approach maintains critical patient-specific characteristics including EGFR amplification and phospho-RTK signaling while supporting experimental manipulation, drug testing, and real-time imaging. Methods describing stem cell culture and generation of embryoid bodies/neural rosettes prior to embedding within basement membrane extract hydrogels for differentiation to cerebral organoids are available in a previously published application note: Differentiation of Pluripotent Stem Cells into Neural Organoids.
Tumor-brain interactions:
Tumor biology research:
Drug discovery and screening:
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