4.7 Article

Development of a primary human Small Intestine-on-a-Chip using biopsy-derived organoids

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-21201-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DARPA [W911NF-12-2-0036]
  2. FDA [HHSF223201310079C]
  3. Ragon Institute of MGH
  4. MIT
  5. Harvard
  6. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
  7. Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University
  8. NIH [F32DK091995, T32DK007477, 5K12HD5289610]
  9. HMS Shore Fellowship
  10. BCH Wolpow/Rubin IBD Fellowship
  11. NASPGHAN Nestle Nutrition Award
  12. HDDC Pilot & Feasibility Award [R01DK084056]
  13. Timothy Murphy Fund
  14. IDDRC [P30HD18655]
  15. HDDC [P30DK034854]

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Here we describe a method for fabricating a primary human Small Intestine-on-a-Chip (Intestine Chip) containing epithelial cells isolated from healthy regions of intestinal biopsies. The primary epithelial cells are expanded as 3D organoids, dissociated, and cultured on a porous membrane within a microfluidic device with human intestinal microvascular endothelium cultured in a parallel microchannel under flow and cyclic deformation. In the Intestine Chip, the epithelium forms villi-like projections lined by polarized epithelial cells that undergo multi-lineage differentiation similar to that of intestinal organoids, however, these cells expose their apical surfaces to an open lumen and interface with endothelium. Transcriptomic analysis also indicates that the Intestine Chip more closely mimics whole human duodenum in vivo when compared to the duodenal organoids used to create the chips. Because fluids flowing through the lumen of the Intestine Chip can be collected continuously, sequential analysis of fluid samples can be used to quantify nutrient digestion, mucus secretion and establishment of intestinal barrier function over a period of multiple days in vitro. The Intestine Chip therefore may be useful as a research tool for applications where normal intestinal function is crucial, including studies of metabolism, nutrition, infection, and drug pharmacokinetics, as well as personalized medicine.

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