Emulate Inc. Boston.
Emulate Inc. Boston;
J Vis Exp. 2022 May 5(183). doi: 10.3791/63724.
The intestinal mucosa is a complex physical and biochemical barrier that fulfills a myriad of important functions. It enables the transport, absorption, and metabolism of nutrients and xenobiotics while facilitating a symbiotic relationship with microbiota and restricting the invasion of microorganisms. Functional interaction between various cell types and their physical and biochemical environment is vital to establish and maintain intestinal tissue homeostasis. Modeling these complex interactions and integrated intestinal physiology in vitro is a formidable goal with the potential to transform the way new therapeutic targets and drug candidates are discovered and developed. Organoids and Organ-on-a-Chip technologies have recently been combined to generate human-relevant intestine chips suitable for studying the functional aspects of intestinal physiology and pathophysiology in vitro. Organoids derived from the biopsies of the small (duodenum) and large intestine are seeded into the top compartment of an organ chip and then successfully expand as monolayers while preserving the distinct cellular, molecular, and functional features of each intestinal region. Human intestine tissue-specific microvascular endothelial cells are incorporated in the bottom compartment of the organ chip to recreate the epithelial-endothelial interface. This novel platform facilitates luminal exposure to nutrients, drugs, and microorganisms, enabling studies of intestinal transport, permeability, and host-microbe interactions. Here, a detailed protocol is provided for the establishment of intestine chips representing the human duodenum (duodenum chip) and colon (colon chip), and their subsequent culture under continuous flow and peristalsis-like deformations. We demonstrate methods for assessing drug metabolism and CYP3A4 induction in duodenum chip using prototypical inducers and substrates. Lastly, we provide a step-by-step procedure for the in vitro modeling of interferon gamma (IFNγ)-mediated barrier disruption (leaky gut syndrome) in a colon chip, including methods for evaluating the alteration of paracellular permeability, changes in cytokine secretion, and transcriptomic profiling of the cells within the chip.
肠黏膜是一个复杂的物理和生化屏障,具有多种重要功能。它使营养物质和外源性物质的运输、吸收和代谢成为可能,同时促进与微生物群的共生关系,并限制微生物的入侵。各种细胞类型及其物理和生化环境之间的功能相互作用对于建立和维持肠道组织的稳态至关重要。在体外模拟这些复杂的相互作用和整合的肠道生理学是一个艰巨的目标,有可能改变新的治疗靶点和药物候选物的发现和开发方式。类器官和器官芯片技术最近已经结合在一起,生成适合于体外研究肠道生理学和病理生理学功能方面的人类相关肠芯片。从小肠(十二指肠)和大肠活检中提取的类器官被接种到器官芯片的上腔室中,然后成功地扩展为单层,同时保留每个肠道区域的独特细胞、分子和功能特征。人类肠道组织特异性微血管内皮细胞被整合到器官芯片的下腔室中,以重新创建上皮-内皮界面。这种新型平台便于肠道对营养物质、药物和微生物的腔内暴露,从而能够研究肠道的转运、通透性和宿主-微生物相互作用。本文提供了详细的方案,用于建立代表人类十二指肠(十二指肠芯片)和结肠(结肠芯片)的肠芯片,并在连续流动和蠕动样变形下对其进行后续培养。我们展示了使用原型诱导物和底物在十二指肠芯片中评估药物代谢和 CYP3A4 诱导的方法。最后,我们提供了在结肠芯片中体外模拟干扰素γ(IFNγ)介导的屏障破坏(渗漏肠综合征)的分步程序,包括评估细胞旁通透性改变、细胞因子分泌变化以及芯片内细胞的转录组谱分析的方法。