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Transcriptome comparisons of in vitro intestinal epithelia grown under static and microfluidic gut-on-chip conditions with in vivo human epithelia
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Metadata
Document Title
Transcriptome comparisons of in vitro intestinal epithelia grown under static and microfluidic gut-on-chip conditions with in vivo human epithelia
Author
Kulthong K., Hooiveld G.J.E.J., Duivenvoorde L., Miro Estruch I., Marin V., van der Zande M., Bouwmeester H.
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Division of Toxicology, Wageningen University, P.O. box 8000, Wageningen, 6700 EA, Netherlands; Wageningen Food Safety Research, P.O. Box 230, Wageningen, 6700 AE, Netherlands; National Nanotechnology Center (NANOTEC), National Science and Technology Development Agency, Pathum Thani, 12120, Thailand; Nutrition, Metabolism and Genomics group, Division of Human Nutrition and Health, Wageningen University, Wageningen, Netherlands
Type
Article
Source Title
Scientific Reports
ISSN
20452322
Year
2021
Volume
11
Issue
1
Open Access
All Open Access, Gold, Green
Publisher
Nature Research
DOI
10.1038/s41598-021-82853-6
Format
Abstract
Gut-on-chip devices enable exposure of cells to a continuous flow of culture medium, inducing shear stresses and could thus better recapitulate the in vivo human intestinal environment in an in vitro epithelial model compared to static culture methods. We aimed to study if dynamic culture conditions affect the gene expression of Caco-2 cells cultured statically or dynamically in a gut-on-chip device and how these gene expression patterns compared to that of intestinal segments in vivo. For this we applied whole genome transcriptomics. Dynamic culture conditions led to a total of 5927 differentially expressed genes (3280 upregulated and 2647 downregulated genes) compared to static culture conditions. Gene set enrichment analysis revealed upregulated pathways associated with the immune system, signal transduction and cell growth and death, and downregulated pathways associated with drug metabolism, compound digestion and absorption under dynamic culture conditions. Comparison of the in vitro gene expression data with transcriptome profiles of human in vivo duodenum, jejunum, ileum and colon tissue samples showed similarities in gene expression profiles with intestinal segments. It is concluded that both the static and the dynamic gut-on-chip model are suitable to study human intestinal epithelial responses as an alternative for animal models. © 2021, The Author(s).
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 3
License
N/A
Rights
N/A
Publication Source
Scopus