4.2 Article

Oxygenation as a driving factor in epithelial differentiation at the air-liquid interface

期刊

INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY
卷 13, 期 3, 页码 61-72

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/intbio/zyab002

关键词

air-liquid interface; epithelium; oxygenation; microenvironment

资金

  1. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec (FRQ)-Nature et technologies [205292]
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2015-05512]
  3. Canada Research Chair in Advanced Cellular Microenvironments
  4. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [PJT-156183]
  5. Primary Airway Cell Biobank at McGill University from Cystic Fibrosis Canada [2997]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Culture at the air-liquid interface is considered necessary for differentiation of epithelial cells, but can be expensive and challenging. Hyperoxygenated submerged culture can significantly improve epithelial differentiation, offering an important strategy for respiratory toxicology and therapeutic development.
Culture at the air-liquid interface is broadly accepted as necessary for differentiation of cultured epithelial cells towards an in vivo-like phenotype. However, air-liquid interface cultures are expensive, laborious and challenging to scale for increased throughput applications. Deconstructing the microenvironmental parameters that drive these differentiation processes could circumvent these limitations, and here we hypothesize that reduced oxygenation due to diffusion limitations in liquid media limits differentiation in submerged cultures; and that this phenotype can be rescued by recreating normoxic conditions at the epithelial monolayer, even under submerged conditions. Guided by computational models, hyperoxygenation of atmospheric conditions was applied to manipulate oxygenation at the monolayer surface. The impact of this rescue condition was confirmed by assessing protein expression of hypoxia-sensitive markers. Differentiation of primary human bronchial epithelial cells isolated from healthy patients was then assessed in air-liquid interface, submerged and hyperoxygenated submerged culture conditions. Markers of differentiation, including epithelial layer thickness, tight junction formation, ciliated surface area and functional capacity for mucociliary clearance, were assessed and found to improve significantly in hyperoxygenated submerged cultures, beyond standard air-liquid interface or submerged culture conditions. These results demonstrate that an air-liquid interface is not necessary to produce highly differentiated epithelial structures, and that increased availability of oxygen and nutrient media can be leveraged as important strategies to improve epithelial differentiation for applications in respiratory toxicology and therapeutic development.

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