4.5 Article

Responses of increasingly complex intestinal epithelium in vitro models to bacterial toll-like receptor agonists

Journal

TOXICOLOGY IN VITRO
Volume 79, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tiv.2021.105280

Keywords

Intestine; Complex in vitro models; Toll-like receptors; Toll-like receptor pathways; IL-8

Categories

Funding

  1. Dutch Research Council [737.016.003]
  2. Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality [KB-37-002-020]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In various in vitro intestinal models, exposure to flagellin triggered an increase in IL-8 secretion as a pro-inflammatory response, while other TLR agonists did not induce a similar response, suggesting a lack of presence or functionality of specific TLRs in these models.
The intestine fulfills roles in the uptake of nutrients and water regulation and acts as a gatekeeper for the intestinal microbiome. For the latter, the intestinal gut barrier system is able to respond to a broad range of bacterial antigens, generally through Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling pathways. To test the capacity of various in vitro intestinal models, we studied IL-8 secretion, as a marker of pro-inflammatory response through the TLR pathway, in a Caco-2 monoculture, Caco-2/HT29-MTX di-culture, Caco-2/HT29-MTX/HMVEC-d tri-culture and in a HT29-p monoculture in response to exposure to various TLR agonists. Twenty-one-day-old differentiated cells in Transwells were exposed to Pam3CSK4 (TLR1/2), lipopolysaccharide (TLR4), single-stranded RNA (TLR7/8), Poly(i:C) (TLR3) and flagellin (TLR5) for 24 h. In all systems IL-8 secretion was increased in response to flagellin exposure, with HT29-p cells also responding to Poly(I:C) exposure. All other agonists did not induce an IL-8 response in the tested in vitro models, indicating that the specific TLRs are either not present or not functional in these models. This highlights the need for careful selection of in vitro models when studying intestinal immune responses and the need for improved in vitro models that better recapitulate intestinal immune responses.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available