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Establishment and Characterization of Immortalized Gingival Epithelial and Fibroblastic Cell Lines for the Development of Organotypic Cultures
被引:26
作者:
Bao, Kai
[1
]
Akguel, Baki
[2
]
Bostanci, Nagihan
[1
]
机构:
[1] Univ Zurich, Inst Oral Biol, Ctr Dent Med, Oral Translat Res Unit, CH-8032 Zurich, Switzerland
[2] Univ Cologne, Inst Virol, D-50931 Cologne, Germany
关键词:
Gingival epithelium;
Gingival fibroblasts;
Human papillomavirus type 16;
Organotypic tissue;
PERIODONTAL-LIGAMENT CELLS;
VITRO SUBGINGIVAL BIOFILMS;
IN-VITRO;
CONNECTIVE-TISSUE;
EXPRESSION;
DIFFERENTIATION;
KERATINOCYTES;
RECEPTOR;
DISEASE;
MUCOSA;
D O I:
10.1159/000363694
中图分类号:
R602 [外科病理学、解剖学];
R32 [人体形态学];
学科分类号:
100101 ;
摘要:
In vitro studies using 3D co-cultures of gingival cells can resemble their in vivo counterparts much better than 2D models that typically only utilize monolayer cultures with short-living primary cells. However, the use of 3D gingival models is still limited through lack of appropriate cell lines. We aimed to establish immortalized cell line models of primary human gingival epithelium keratinocytes (HGEK) and gingival fibroblasts (GFB). Immortalized cell lines (HGEK-16 and GFB-16) were induced by E6 and E7 oncoproteins of human papillomavirus. In addition, 3D multilayered organotypic cultures were formed by embedding GFB-16 cells within a collagen (Col) matrix and seeding of HGEK-16 cells on the upper surfaces. Cell growth was analyzed in both immortalized cell lines and their parental primary cells. The expression levels of cell type-specific markers, i.e. cytokeratin (CK) 10, CK13, CK16, CK18, CK19 for HGEK-16 and Col I and Col II for GFB-16, were evaluated by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). Expansion of the primary cultures was impeded at early passages, while the transformed immortalized cell lines could be expanded for more than 30 passages. In 3D cultures, immortalized HGEK formed a multilayer of epithelial cells. qRT-PCR showed that cell-specific marker expression in the 3D cultures was qualitatively and quantitatively closer to that in human gingival tissue than to monolayer cultures. These results indicate that immortalized gingival fibroblastic and epithelial cell lines can successfully form organotypic multilayered cultures and, therefore, may be useful tools for studying gingival tissue in vitro. (C) 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel
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页码:228 / 237
页数:10
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