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Implementation of a dynamic intestinal gut-on-a-chip barrier model for transport studies of lipophilic dioxin congeners

Novel microfluidic technologies allow the manufacture of in vitro organ-on-a-chip systems that hold great promise to adequately recapitulate the biophysical and functional complexity of organs found in vivo. In this study, a gut-on-a-chip model was developed aiming to study the potential cellular as...

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Autores principales: Kulthong, Kornphimol, Duivenvoorde, Loes, Mizera, Barbara Z., Rijkers, Deborah, Dam, Guillaume ten, Oegema, Gerlof, Puzyn, Tomasz, Bouwmeester, Hans, van der Zande, Meike
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9086222/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35547722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra05430d
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author Kulthong, Kornphimol
Duivenvoorde, Loes
Mizera, Barbara Z.
Rijkers, Deborah
Dam, Guillaume ten
Oegema, Gerlof
Puzyn, Tomasz
Bouwmeester, Hans
van der Zande, Meike
author_facet Kulthong, Kornphimol
Duivenvoorde, Loes
Mizera, Barbara Z.
Rijkers, Deborah
Dam, Guillaume ten
Oegema, Gerlof
Puzyn, Tomasz
Bouwmeester, Hans
van der Zande, Meike
author_sort Kulthong, Kornphimol
collection PubMed
description Novel microfluidic technologies allow the manufacture of in vitro organ-on-a-chip systems that hold great promise to adequately recapitulate the biophysical and functional complexity of organs found in vivo. In this study, a gut-on-a-chip model was developed aiming to study the potential cellular association and transport of food contaminants. Intestinal epithelial cells (Caco-2) were cultured on a porous polyester membrane that was tightly clamped between two glass slides to form two separate flow chambers. Glass syringes, polytetrafluoroethylene tubing and glass microfluidic chips were selected to minimize surface adsorption of the studied compounds (i.e. highly lipophilic dioxins), during the transport studies. Confocal microscopy studies revealed that, upon culturing under constant flow for 7 days, Caco-2 cells formed complete and polarized monolayers as observed after culturing for 21 days under static conditions in Transwells. We exposed Caco-2 monolayers in the chip and Transwell to a mixture of 17 dioxin congeners (7 polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and 10 polychlorinated dibenzofurans) for 24 h. Gas chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry was used to assess the cellular association and transport of individual dioxin congeners across the Caco-2 cell monolayers. After 24 h, the amount of transported dioxin mixture was similar in both the dynamic gut-on-a-chip model and the static Transwell model. The transport of individual congeners corresponded with their number of chlorine atoms and substitution patterns as revealed by quantitative structure–property relationship modelling. These results show that the gut-on-a-chip model can be used, as well as the traditional static Transwell system, to study the cellular association and transport of lipophilic compounds like dioxins.
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spelling pubmed-90862222022-05-10 Implementation of a dynamic intestinal gut-on-a-chip barrier model for transport studies of lipophilic dioxin congeners Kulthong, Kornphimol Duivenvoorde, Loes Mizera, Barbara Z. Rijkers, Deborah Dam, Guillaume ten Oegema, Gerlof Puzyn, Tomasz Bouwmeester, Hans van der Zande, Meike RSC Adv Chemistry Novel microfluidic technologies allow the manufacture of in vitro organ-on-a-chip systems that hold great promise to adequately recapitulate the biophysical and functional complexity of organs found in vivo. In this study, a gut-on-a-chip model was developed aiming to study the potential cellular association and transport of food contaminants. Intestinal epithelial cells (Caco-2) were cultured on a porous polyester membrane that was tightly clamped between two glass slides to form two separate flow chambers. Glass syringes, polytetrafluoroethylene tubing and glass microfluidic chips were selected to minimize surface adsorption of the studied compounds (i.e. highly lipophilic dioxins), during the transport studies. Confocal microscopy studies revealed that, upon culturing under constant flow for 7 days, Caco-2 cells formed complete and polarized monolayers as observed after culturing for 21 days under static conditions in Transwells. We exposed Caco-2 monolayers in the chip and Transwell to a mixture of 17 dioxin congeners (7 polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and 10 polychlorinated dibenzofurans) for 24 h. Gas chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry was used to assess the cellular association and transport of individual dioxin congeners across the Caco-2 cell monolayers. After 24 h, the amount of transported dioxin mixture was similar in both the dynamic gut-on-a-chip model and the static Transwell model. The transport of individual congeners corresponded with their number of chlorine atoms and substitution patterns as revealed by quantitative structure–property relationship modelling. These results show that the gut-on-a-chip model can be used, as well as the traditional static Transwell system, to study the cellular association and transport of lipophilic compounds like dioxins. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018-09-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9086222/ /pubmed/35547722 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra05430d Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Kulthong, Kornphimol
Duivenvoorde, Loes
Mizera, Barbara Z.
Rijkers, Deborah
Dam, Guillaume ten
Oegema, Gerlof
Puzyn, Tomasz
Bouwmeester, Hans
van der Zande, Meike
Implementation of a dynamic intestinal gut-on-a-chip barrier model for transport studies of lipophilic dioxin congeners
title Implementation of a dynamic intestinal gut-on-a-chip barrier model for transport studies of lipophilic dioxin congeners
title_full Implementation of a dynamic intestinal gut-on-a-chip barrier model for transport studies of lipophilic dioxin congeners
title_fullStr Implementation of a dynamic intestinal gut-on-a-chip barrier model for transport studies of lipophilic dioxin congeners
title_full_unstemmed Implementation of a dynamic intestinal gut-on-a-chip barrier model for transport studies of lipophilic dioxin congeners
title_short Implementation of a dynamic intestinal gut-on-a-chip barrier model for transport studies of lipophilic dioxin congeners
title_sort implementation of a dynamic intestinal gut-on-a-chip barrier model for transport studies of lipophilic dioxin congeners
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9086222/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35547722
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8ra05430d
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