4.8 Article

A microfluidics-based in vitro model of the gastrointestinal human-microbe interface

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms11535

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ATTRACT programme grant [ATTRACT/A09/03]
  2. CORE programme grant [CORE/11/BM/1186762, CORE/14/BM/8066232]
  3. European Union [INTER/JPND/12/01, PoC-15/11014639]
  4. Accompany Measures mobility grant [12/AM2c/05]
  5. INTER mobility grant [INTER/14/7516918]
  6. Aide a la Formation Recherche (AFR) postdoctoral grant [AFR/PDR 2013-1/BM/5821107]
  7. Luxembourg National Research Fund (FNR)
  8. Fondation Recherche sur le SIDA du Luxembourg

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Changes in the human gastrointestinal microbiome are associated with several diseases. To infer causality, experiments in representative models are essential, but widely used animal models exhibit limitations. Here we present a modular, microfluidics-based model (HuMiX, human-microbial crosstalk), which allows co-culture of human and microbial cells under conditions representative of the gastrointestinal human-microbe interface. We demonstrate the ability of HuMiX to recapitulate in vivo transcriptional, metabolic and immunological responses in human intestinal epithelial cells following their co-culture with the commensal Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG) grown under anaerobic conditions. In addition, we show that the co-culture of human epithelial cells with the obligate anaerobe Bacteroides caccae and LGG results in a transcriptional response, which is distinct from that of a co-culture solely comprising LGG. HuMiX facilitates investigations of host-microbe molecular interactions and provides insights into a range of fundamental research questions linking the gastrointestinal microbiome to human health and disease.

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