4.1 Article

The effect of serum starvation on tight junctional proteins and barrier formation in Caco-2 cells

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS REPORTS
Volume 27, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrep.2021.101096

Keywords

In vitro model; Serum-free; Transendothelial electrical resistance (TEER); Occludin; Zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1); Drug delivery

Funding

  1. University of Limerick, Faculty of Science and Engineering Postgraduate Scholarship

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The study investigated serum starvation as a method to enhance Caco-2 barrier stability and resistance, resulting in increased tight junction production and improved barrier function for drug permeability assessments.
Assessing the ability of pharmaceutics to cross biological barriers and reach the site-of-action requires faithful representation of these barriers in vitro. Difficulties have arisen in replicating in vivo resistance in vitro. This paper investigated serum starvation as a method to increase Caco-2 barrier stability and resistance. The effect of serum starvation on tight junction production was examined using transwell models; specifically, transendothelial electrical resistance (TEER), and the expression and localization of tight junction proteins, occludin and zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1), were studied using western blotting and immunofluorescence. Changing cells to serum-free media 2 days post-seeding resulted in TEER readings of nearly 5000 Omega cm(2) but the TEER rapidly declined subsequently. Meanwhile, exchanging cells to serum-free media 4-6 days post-seeding produced barriers with resistance readings between 3000 and 4000 Omega cm(2), which could be maintained for 18 days. This corresponded to an increase in occludin levels. Serum starvation as a means of barrier formation is simple, reproducible, and costeffective. It could feasibly be implemented in a variety of pre-clinical pharmaceutical assessments of drug permeability across various biological barriers with the view to improving the clinical translation of novel therapeutics.

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