Robust bioengineered 3D functional human intestinal epithelium
Article 2015 en
Authors
YC
Ying Chen
YL
Yinan Lin
KD
Kimberly M. Davis
Abstract
1 min read
Intestinal functions are central to human physiology, health and disease. Options to study these functions with direct relevance to the human condition remain severely limited when using conventional cell cultures, microfluidic systems, organoids, animal surrogates or human studies. To replicate in vitro the tissue architecture and microenvironments of native intestine, we developed a 3D porous protein scaffolding system, containing a geometrically-engineered hollow lumen, with adaptability to both large and small intestines. These intestinal tissues demonstrated representative human responses by permitting continuous accumulation of mucous secretions on the epithelial surface, establishing low oxygen tension in the lumen, and interacting with gut-colonizing bacteria. The newly developed 3D intestine model enabled months-long sustained access to these intestinal functions in vitro, readily integrable with a multitude of different organ mimics and will therefore ensure a reliable ex vivo tissue system for studies in a broad context of human intestinal diseases and treatments.
Wenda Zhou, Ying Chen, Terrence T. Roh, Yinan Lin, Shengjie Ling, Siwei Zhao, James Lin, Noor Khalil, Dana M. Cairns, Eleana Manousiouthakis, Megan W. Tse, David Kaplan
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