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Establishment of a Patient-Derived, Magnetic Levitation-Based, Three-Dimensional Spheroid Granuloma Model for Human Tuberculosis

Tuberculous granulomas that develop in response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis) infection are highly dynamic entities shaped by the host immune response and disease kinetics. Within this microenvironment, immune cell recruitment, polarization, and activation are driven not only by co...

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Autores principales: Kotze, Leigh A., Beltran, Caroline G. G., Lang, Dirk, Loxton, Andre G., Cooper, Susan, Meiring, Maynard, Koegelenberg, Coenraad F. N., Allwood, Brian W., Malherbe, Stephanus T., Hiemstra, Andriette M., Glanzmann, Brigitte, Kinnear, Craig, Walzl, Gerhard, du Plessis, Nelita
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8386456/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34287004
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00552-21
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author Kotze, Leigh A.
Beltran, Caroline G. G.
Lang, Dirk
Loxton, Andre G.
Cooper, Susan
Meiring, Maynard
Koegelenberg, Coenraad F. N.
Allwood, Brian W.
Malherbe, Stephanus T.
Hiemstra, Andriette M.
Glanzmann, Brigitte
Kinnear, Craig
Walzl, Gerhard
du Plessis, Nelita
author_facet Kotze, Leigh A.
Beltran, Caroline G. G.
Lang, Dirk
Loxton, Andre G.
Cooper, Susan
Meiring, Maynard
Koegelenberg, Coenraad F. N.
Allwood, Brian W.
Malherbe, Stephanus T.
Hiemstra, Andriette M.
Glanzmann, Brigitte
Kinnear, Craig
Walzl, Gerhard
du Plessis, Nelita
author_sort Kotze, Leigh A.
collection PubMed
description Tuberculous granulomas that develop in response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis) infection are highly dynamic entities shaped by the host immune response and disease kinetics. Within this microenvironment, immune cell recruitment, polarization, and activation are driven not only by coexisting cell types and multicellular interactions but also by M. tuberculosis-mediated changes involving metabolic heterogeneity, epigenetic reprogramming, and rewiring of the transcriptional landscape of host cells. There is an increased appreciation of the in vivo complexity, versatility, and heterogeneity of the cellular compartment that constitutes the tuberculosis (TB) granuloma and the difficulty in translating findings from animal models to human disease. Here, we describe a novel biomimetic in vitro three-dimensional (3D) human lung spheroid granuloma model, resembling early “innate” and “adaptive” stages of the TB granuloma spectrum, and present results of histological architecture, host transcriptional characterization, mycobacteriological features, cytokine profiles, and spatial distribution of key immune cells. A range of manipulations of immune cell populations in these spheroid granulomas will allow the study of host/pathogen pathways involved in the outcome of infection, as well as pharmacological interventions. IMPORTANCE TB is a highly infectious disease, with granulomas as its hallmark. Granulomas play an important role in the control of M. tuberculosis infection and as such are crucial indicators for our understanding of host resistance to TB. Correlates of risk and protection to M. tuberculosis are still elusive, and the granuloma provides the perfect environment in which to study the immune response to infection and broaden our understanding thereof; however, human granulomas are difficult to obtain, and animal models are costly and do not always faithfully mimic human immunity. In fact, most TB research is conducted in vitro on immortalized or primary immune cells and cultured in two dimensions on flat, rigid plastic, which does not reflect in vivo characteristics. We have therefore conceived a 3D, human in vitro spheroid granuloma model which allows researchers to study features of granuloma-forming diseases in a 3D structural environment resembling in vivo granuloma architecture and cellular orientation.
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spelling pubmed-83864562021-09-09 Establishment of a Patient-Derived, Magnetic Levitation-Based, Three-Dimensional Spheroid Granuloma Model for Human Tuberculosis Kotze, Leigh A. Beltran, Caroline G. G. Lang, Dirk Loxton, Andre G. Cooper, Susan Meiring, Maynard Koegelenberg, Coenraad F. N. Allwood, Brian W. Malherbe, Stephanus T. Hiemstra, Andriette M. Glanzmann, Brigitte Kinnear, Craig Walzl, Gerhard du Plessis, Nelita mSphere Research Article Tuberculous granulomas that develop in response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis) infection are highly dynamic entities shaped by the host immune response and disease kinetics. Within this microenvironment, immune cell recruitment, polarization, and activation are driven not only by coexisting cell types and multicellular interactions but also by M. tuberculosis-mediated changes involving metabolic heterogeneity, epigenetic reprogramming, and rewiring of the transcriptional landscape of host cells. There is an increased appreciation of the in vivo complexity, versatility, and heterogeneity of the cellular compartment that constitutes the tuberculosis (TB) granuloma and the difficulty in translating findings from animal models to human disease. Here, we describe a novel biomimetic in vitro three-dimensional (3D) human lung spheroid granuloma model, resembling early “innate” and “adaptive” stages of the TB granuloma spectrum, and present results of histological architecture, host transcriptional characterization, mycobacteriological features, cytokine profiles, and spatial distribution of key immune cells. A range of manipulations of immune cell populations in these spheroid granulomas will allow the study of host/pathogen pathways involved in the outcome of infection, as well as pharmacological interventions. IMPORTANCE TB is a highly infectious disease, with granulomas as its hallmark. Granulomas play an important role in the control of M. tuberculosis infection and as such are crucial indicators for our understanding of host resistance to TB. Correlates of risk and protection to M. tuberculosis are still elusive, and the granuloma provides the perfect environment in which to study the immune response to infection and broaden our understanding thereof; however, human granulomas are difficult to obtain, and animal models are costly and do not always faithfully mimic human immunity. In fact, most TB research is conducted in vitro on immortalized or primary immune cells and cultured in two dimensions on flat, rigid plastic, which does not reflect in vivo characteristics. We have therefore conceived a 3D, human in vitro spheroid granuloma model which allows researchers to study features of granuloma-forming diseases in a 3D structural environment resembling in vivo granuloma architecture and cellular orientation. American Society for Microbiology 2021-07-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8386456/ /pubmed/34287004 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00552-21 Text en Copyright © 2021 Kotze et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Kotze, Leigh A.
Beltran, Caroline G. G.
Lang, Dirk
Loxton, Andre G.
Cooper, Susan
Meiring, Maynard
Koegelenberg, Coenraad F. N.
Allwood, Brian W.
Malherbe, Stephanus T.
Hiemstra, Andriette M.
Glanzmann, Brigitte
Kinnear, Craig
Walzl, Gerhard
du Plessis, Nelita
Establishment of a Patient-Derived, Magnetic Levitation-Based, Three-Dimensional Spheroid Granuloma Model for Human Tuberculosis
title Establishment of a Patient-Derived, Magnetic Levitation-Based, Three-Dimensional Spheroid Granuloma Model for Human Tuberculosis
title_full Establishment of a Patient-Derived, Magnetic Levitation-Based, Three-Dimensional Spheroid Granuloma Model for Human Tuberculosis
title_fullStr Establishment of a Patient-Derived, Magnetic Levitation-Based, Three-Dimensional Spheroid Granuloma Model for Human Tuberculosis
title_full_unstemmed Establishment of a Patient-Derived, Magnetic Levitation-Based, Three-Dimensional Spheroid Granuloma Model for Human Tuberculosis
title_short Establishment of a Patient-Derived, Magnetic Levitation-Based, Three-Dimensional Spheroid Granuloma Model for Human Tuberculosis
title_sort establishment of a patient-derived, magnetic levitation-based, three-dimensional spheroid granuloma model for human tuberculosis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8386456/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34287004
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00552-21
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