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Application of 3D Cell Culture Techniques in Nanotoxicology: How Far Are We? Publisher Pubmed



Shakeri R ; Mirjalili SZ ; Karakus CO ; Safavi M
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Source: Stem Cell Reviews and Reports Published:2026


Abstract

Investigation of toxicological profile and possible side effects of engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) is of high importance. Historically, two-dimensional (2D) cell culture was used to study the toxicity of the ENMs, but due to their inability to simulate in vivo cell behavior, three-dimensional (3D) cell culture systems have been developed. Nanotoxicity studies initiate with in vitro experiments and continue with in vivo studies, which are very challenging and sometimes accompanied by conflicting data due to the in vitro-in vivo gap. Thus, scientists are turning their attention to microfabrication techniques and engineered systems “called organ-on-a-chips”, which act as an intermediate between in vivo and in vitro systems. The present account tries to review the classical study models and suitably cover the emerging 3D culture models including scaffold-free and scaffold-based 3D cell cultures, 3D co-culture with direct contact and without cell-cell contact methods as well as microfluidic-based tissue chips and organoids. Overall, this review aims to give readers a better insight about the ENMs’ toxicology and fill the gaps between the knowledge and practical techniques. Hopefully, the presented information will resolve the issues of 2D in vitro cultures and display the clinically relevant responses to the concerns of therapeutic ENMs. © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2026.
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