4.7 Article

High-throughput confocal imaging of differentiated 3D liver-like spheroid cellular stress response reporters for identification of drug-induced liver injury liability

Journal

ARCHIVES OF TOXICOLOGY
Volume 93, Issue 10, Pages 2895-2911

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00204-019-02552-0

Keywords

High-throughput imaging; HepG2 spheroids; Drug-induced liver injury; BAC-reporter cells; Cellular stress response; Liver transcription factors

Categories

Funding

  1. Innovative Medicine Initiative Joint Undertaking MIP DILI project [115336]
  2. European Commission FP7 programme Seurat-1 Detective project [266838]
  3. EU-ToxRisk project - European Commission under the Horizon 2020 programme [681002]
  4. Innovative Medicine Initiative 2 Joint Undertaking eTRANSAFE project [777365]

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Adaptive stress response pathways play a key role in the switch between adaptation and adversity, and are important in drug-induced liver injury. Previously, we have established an HepG2 fluorescent protein reporter platform to monitor adaptive stress response activation following drug treatment. HepG2 cells are often used in high-throughput primary toxicity screening, but metabolizing capacity in these cells is low and repeated dose toxicity testing inherently difficult. Here, we applied our bacterial artificial chromosome-based GFP reporter cell lines representing Nrf2 activation (Srxn1-GFP and NQO1-GFP), unfolded protein response (BiP-GFP and Chop-GFP), and DNA damage response (p21-GFP and Btg2-GFP) as long-term differentiated 3D liver-like spheroid cultures. All HepG2 GFP reporter lines differentiated into 3D spheroids similar to wild-type HepG2 cells. We systematically optimized the automated imaging and quantification of GFP reporter activity in individual spheroids using high-throughput confocal microscopy with a reference set of DILI compounds that activate these three stress response pathways at the transcriptional level in primary human hepatocytes. A panel of 33 compounds with established DILI liability was further tested in these six 3D GFP reporters in single 48 h treatment or 6 day daily repeated treatment. Strongest stress response activation was observed after 6-day repeated treatment, with the BiP and Srxn1-GFP reporters being most responsive and identified particular severe-DILI-onset compounds. Compounds that showed no GFP reporter activation in two-dimensional (2D) monolayer demonstrated GFP reporter stress response activation in 3D spheroids. Our data indicate that the application of BAC-GFP HepG2 cellular stress reporters in differentiated 3D spheroids is a promising strategy for mechanism-based identification of compounds with liability for DILI.

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