Culturing and Applications of Rotating Wall Vessel Bioreactor Derived 3D Epithelial Cell Models

被引:57
作者
Radtke, Andrea L. [1 ]
Herbst-Kralovetz, Melissa M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Arizona, Coll Med Phoenix, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
来源
JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS | 2012年 / 62期
关键词
Cellular Biology; Issue; 62; Rotating wall vessel bioreactor; female reproductive tract; human epithelial cells; three-dimensional in vitro cell culture; organotypic mucosal models; vaginal epithelial cells; microbicide; herpes simplex virus; toxicology; host-pathogen interactions; hormone receptors; LIVER-CELLS; STEM-CELLS; TISSUE;
D O I
10.3791/3868
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Cells and tissues in the body experience environmental conditions that influence their architecture, intercellular communications, and overall functions. For in vitro cell culture models to accurately mimic the tissue of interest, the growth environment of the culture is a critical aspect to consider. Commonly used conventional cell culture systems propagate epithelial cells on flat two-dimensional (2-D) impermeable surfaces. Although much has been learned from conventional cell culture systems, many findings are not reproducible in human clinical trials or tissue explants, potentially as a result of the lack of a physiologically relevant microenvironment. Here, we describe a culture system that overcomes many of the culture condition boundaries of 2-D cell cultures, by using the innovative rotating wall vessel (RWV) bioreactor technology. We and others have shown that organotypic RWV-derived models can recapitulate structure, function, and authentic human responses to external stimuli similarly to human explant tissues(1-6). The RWV bioreactor is a suspension culture system that allows for the growth of epithelial cells under low physiological fluid shear conditions. The bioreactors come in two different formats, a high-aspect rotating vessel (HARV) or a slow-turning lateral vessel (STLV), in which they differ by their aeration source. Epithelial cells are added to the bioreactor of choice in combination with porous, collagen-coated microcarrier beads (Figure 1A). The cells utilize the beads as a growth scaffold during the constant free fall in the bioreactor (Figure 1B). The microenvironment provided by the bioreactor allows the cells to form three-dimensional (3-D) aggregates displaying in vivo-like characteristics often not observed under standard 2-D culture conditions (Figure 1D). These characteristics include tight junctions, mucus production, apical/basal orientation, in vivo protein localization, and additional epithelial cell-type specific properties. The progression from a monolayer of epithelial cells to a fully differentiated 3-D aggregate varies based on cell type(1,7-13). Periodic sampling from the bioreactor allows for monitoring of epithelial aggregate formation, cellular differentiation markers and viability (Figure 1D). Once cellular differentiation and aggregate formation is established, the cells are harvested from the bioreactor, and similar assays performed on 2-D cells can be applied to the 3-D aggregates with a few considerations (Figure 1E-G). In this work, we describe detailed steps of how to culture 3D epithelial cell aggregates in the RWV bioreactor system and a variety of potential assays and analyses that can be executed with the 3-D aggregates. These analyses include, but are not limited to, structural/morphological analysis (confocal, scanning and transmission electron microscopy), cytokine/chemokine secretion and cell signaling (cytometric bead array and Western blot analysis), gene expression analysis (real-time PCR), toxicological/drug analysis and host-pathogen interactions. The utilization of these assays set the foundation for more in-depth and expansive studies such as metabolomics, transcriptomics, proteomics and other array-based applications. Our goal is to present a non-conventional means of culturing human epithelial cells to produce organotypic 3-D models that recapitulate the human in vivo tissue, in a facile and robust system to be used by researchers with diverse scientific interests.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 24 条
[1]   Large scale identification of proteins, mucins, and their O-glycosylation in the endocervical mucus during the menstrual cycle [J].
Andersch-Bjorkman, Ylva ;
Thomsson, Kristina A. ;
Larssont, Jessica M. Holmen ;
Ekerhovd, Erling ;
Hansson, Gunnar C. .
MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS, 2007, 6 (04) :708-716
[2]   Organotypic 3D cell culture models: using the rotating wall vessel to study host-pathogen interactions [J].
Barrila, Jennifer ;
Radtke, Andrea L. ;
Crabbe, Aurelie ;
Sarker, Shameema F. ;
Herbst-Kralovetz, Melissa M. ;
Ott, C. Mark ;
Nickerson, Cheryl A. .
NATURE REVIEWS MICROBIOLOGY, 2010, 8 (11) :791-801
[3]   In vitro preclinical testing of nonoxynol-9 as potential anti-human immunodeficiency virus microbicide: a retrospective analysis of results from five laboratories [J].
Beer, BE ;
Doncel, GF ;
Krebs, FC ;
Shattock, RJ ;
Fletcher, PS ;
Buckheit, RW ;
Watson, K ;
Dezzutti, CS ;
Cummins, JE ;
Bromley, E ;
Richardson-Harman, N ;
Pallansch, LA ;
Lackman-Smith, C ;
Osterling, C ;
Mankowski, M ;
Miller, SR ;
Catalone, BJ ;
Welsh, PA ;
Howett, MK ;
Wigdahl, B ;
Turpin, JA ;
Reichelderfer, P .
ANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY, 2006, 50 (02) :713-723
[4]   Three-dimensional organotypic models of human colonic epithelium to study the early stages of enteric salmonellosis [J].
Bentrup, Kerstin Honer zu ;
Ramamurthy, Rajee ;
Ott, C. Mark ;
Emami, Kamal ;
Nelman-Gonzalez, Mayra. ;
Wilson, James W. ;
Richter, Emily G. ;
Goodwin, Thomas J. ;
Alexander, J. Stephen ;
Pierson, Duane L. ;
Pellis, Neal ;
Buchanan, Kent L. ;
Nickerson, Cheryl A. .
MICROBES AND INFECTION, 2006, 8 (07) :1813-1825
[5]   A549 lung epithelial cells grown as three-dimensional aggregates:: Alternative tissue culture model for Pseudomonas aeruginosa pathogenesis [J].
Carterson, AJ ;
Bentrup, KHZ ;
Ott, CM ;
Clarke, MS ;
Pierson, DL ;
Vanderburg, CR ;
Buchanan, KL ;
Nickerson, CA ;
Schurr, MJ .
INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, 2005, 73 (02) :1129-1140
[6]   A three-dimensional tissue culture model for the study of attach and efface lesion formation by enteropathogenic and enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli [J].
Carvalho, HM ;
Teel, LD ;
Goping, G ;
O'Brien, AD .
CELLULAR MICROBIOLOGY, 2005, 7 (12) :1771-1781
[7]   Invasion of human tissue ex vivo by Borrelia burgdorferi [J].
Duray, PH ;
Yin, SR ;
Ito, Y ;
Bezrukov, L ;
Cox, C ;
Cho, MS ;
Fitzgerald, W ;
Dorward, D ;
Zimmerberg, J ;
Margolis, L .
JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2005, 191 (10) :1747-1754
[8]   Quantification and comparison of toll-like receptor expression and responsiveness in primary and immortalized human female lower genital tract epithelia [J].
Herbst-Kralovetz, Melissa M. ;
Quayle, Alison J. ;
Ficarra, Mercedes ;
Greene, Sheila ;
Rose, William A., II ;
Chesson, Ralph ;
Spagnuolo, Rae Ann ;
Pyles, Richard B. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTIVE IMMUNOLOGY, 2008, 59 (03) :212-224
[9]   Innate and adaptive immunity at mucosal surfaces of the female reproductive tract: stratification and integration of immune protection against the transmission of sexually transmitted infections [J].
Hickey, D. K. ;
Patel, M. V. ;
Fahey, J. V. ;
Wira, C. R. .
JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTIVE IMMUNOLOGY, 2011, 88 (02) :185-194
[10]   Development and Characterization of a Three-Dimensional Organotypic Human Vaginal Epithelial Cell Model [J].
Hjelm, Brooke E. ;
Berta, Alice N. ;
Nickerson, Cheryl A. ;
Arntzen, Charles J. ;
Herbst-Kralovetz, Melissa M. .
BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION, 2010, 82 (03) :617-627