Department of Pathophysiology, Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czechia.
Rare Diseases Research Unit, Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, First Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czechia.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2020 Feb 21;11:57. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2020.00057. eCollection 2020.
Hypoxia is characterized as insufficient oxygen delivery to tissues and cells in the body and is prevalent in many human physiology processes and diseases. Thus, it is an attractive state to experimentally study to understand its inner mechanisms as well as to develop and test therapies against pathological conditions related to hypoxia. Animal models fail to recapitulate some of the key hallmarks of human physiology, which leads to human cell cultures; however, they are prone to bias, namely when pericellular oxygen concentration (partial pressure) does not respect oxygen dynamics . A search of the current literature on the topic revealed this was the case for many original studies pertaining to experimental models of hypoxia . Therefore, in this review, we present evidence mandating for the close control of oxygen levels in cell culture models of hypoxia. First, we discuss the basic physical laws required for understanding the oxygen dynamics , most notably the limited diffusion through a liquid medium that hampers the oxygenation of cells in conventional cultures. We then summarize up-to-date knowledge of techniques that help standardize the culture environment in a replicable fashion by increasing oxygen delivery to the cells and measuring pericellular levels. We also discuss how these tools may be applied to model both constant and intermittent hypoxia in a physiologically relevant manner, considering known values of partial pressure of tissue normoxia and hypoxia , compared to conventional cultures incubated at rigid oxygen pressure. Attention is given to the potential influence of three-dimensional tissue cultures and hypercapnia management on these models. Finally, we discuss the implications of these concepts for cell cultures, which try to emulate tissue normoxia, and conclude that the maintenance of precise oxygen levels is important in any cell culture setting.
缺氧是指身体组织和细胞供氧不足,在许多人体生理过程和疾病中都很常见。因此,缺氧是一个很有吸引力的实验研究状态,可以帮助我们了解其内在机制,并开发和测试针对与缺氧相关的病理条件的治疗方法。动物模型无法再现人体生理学的一些关键特征,因此需要使用人类细胞培养;然而,它们容易出现偏差,特别是当细胞周围的氧浓度(分压)不尊重氧动力学 时。对当前关于缺氧实验模型的文献进行检索,发现许多原始研究都存在这种情况。因此,在这篇综述中,我们提出了证据,要求在缺氧的细胞培养模型中严格控制氧水平。首先,我们讨论了理解氧动力学所需的基本物理定律,特别是在液体介质中扩散受限,这会阻碍常规培养中细胞的氧合。然后,我们总结了最新的技术知识,这些技术通过增加细胞供氧和测量细胞周围水平来帮助以可重复的方式标准化培养环境。我们还讨论了如何以生理相关的方式应用这些工具来模拟恒氧和间歇性缺氧,同时考虑到组织常氧和缺氧的分压的已知值,与在刚性氧压下孵育的常规培养相比。我们还关注了三维组织培养和高碳酸血症管理对这些模型的潜在影响。最后,我们讨论了这些概念对试图模拟组织常氧的细胞培养的影响,并得出结论,在任何细胞培养环境中,维持精确的氧水平都很重要。