Yen Lu, Nelli Rahul K, Twu Ning-Chieh, Mora-Díaz Juan Carlos, Castillo Gino, Sitthicharoenchai Panchan, Giménez-Lirola Luis G
Department of Veterinary Diagnostic and Production Animal Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, United States.
Infectious Diseases Laboratory Research-LID, Facultad de Ciencia e Ingenieria, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Peru.
Front Immunol. 2024 Sep 17;15:1451154. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1451154. eCollection 2024.
The critical early stages of infection and innate immune responses to porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV) at the intestinal epithelium remain underexplored due to the limitations of traditional cell culture and animal models. This study aims to establish a porcine enteroid culture model to investigate potential differences in susceptibility to infection across segments of the porcine small intestine (duodenum, jejunum, and ileum).
Intestinal crypt cells from nursery pigs were cultured in Matrigel to differentiate into porcine enteroid monolayer cultures (PEMCs). Following characterization, PEMCs were enzymatically dissociated and subcultured on transwell inserts (PETCs) for apical surface exposure and infection studies. Characterization of region-specific PEMCs and PETCs included assessment of morphology, proliferation, viability, and cellular phenotyping via immunohistochemistry/immunocytochemistry and gene expression analysis. Subsequently, PETCs were inoculated with 10 TCID (50% tissue culture infectious dose)/mL of a high pathogenic PEDV non-S INDEL strain and incubated for 24 h. Infection outcomes were assessed by cytopathic effect, PEDV N protein expression (immunofluorescence assay, IFA), and PEDV N-gene detection (quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, RT-qPCR).
No significant morphological and phenotypical differences were observed among PEMCs and PETCs across intestinal regions, resembling the porcine intestinal epithelium. Although PETCs established from different segments of the small intestine were susceptible to PEDV infection, jejunum-derived PETCs exhibited higher PEDV replication, confirmed by IFA and RT-qPCR.
This segment-specific enteroid culture model provides a reliable platform for virological studies, offering a controlled environment that overcomes the limitations of and traditional cell culture methods. Standardizing culture conditions and characterizing the model are essential for advancing enteroid-based infection models.
由于传统细胞培养和动物模型的局限性,猪流行性腹泻病毒(PEDV)在肠道上皮细胞中的关键早期感染阶段和固有免疫反应仍未得到充分研究。本研究旨在建立一种猪肠道类器官培养模型,以研究猪小肠各段(十二指肠、空肠和回肠)对感染易感性的潜在差异。
将保育猪的肠道隐窝细胞培养于基质胶中,分化为猪肠道类器官单层培养物(PEMCs)。鉴定后,将PEMCs酶解并传代培养于Transwell小室(PETCs)上,用于顶端表面暴露和感染研究。对区域特异性PEMCs和PETCs的鉴定包括通过免疫组织化学/免疫细胞化学和基因表达分析评估形态、增殖、活力和细胞表型。随后,用10 TCID(50%组织培养感染剂量)/mL的高致病性PEDV非S INDEL毒株接种PETCs,并孵育24小时。通过细胞病变效应、PEDV N蛋白表达(免疫荧光分析,IFA)和PEDV N基因检测(定量逆转录聚合酶链反应,RT-qPCR)评估感染结果。
在不同肠道区域的PEMCs和PETCs之间未观察到明显的形态和表型差异,与猪肠道上皮相似。尽管从小肠不同段建立的PETCs对PEDV感染敏感,但空肠来源的PETCs表现出更高的PEDV复制,IFA和RT-qPCR证实了这一点。
这种段特异性肠道类器官培养模型为病毒学研究提供了一个可靠平台,提供了一个可控环境,克服了传统细胞培养方法的局限性。标准化培养条件并对模型进行表征对于推进基于肠道类器官的感染模型至关重要。