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The fibrotic response of primary liver spheroids recapitulates in vivo hepatic stellate cell activation.

Authors :
Mannaerts, Inge
Eysackers, Nathalie
Anne van Os, Elise
Verhulst, Stefaan
Roosens, Tiffany
Smout, Ayla
Hierlemann, Andreas
Frey, Olivier
Leite, Sofia Batista
van Grunsven, Leo A.
Source :
Biomaterials. Dec2020, Vol. 261, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

A major obstacle in the development of efficient therapies for progressive liver fibrosis is the lack of representative in vitro models of liver fibrosis to aid in understanding the mechanisms of the disease and to promote the development of pharmaceuticals. Our aim was to develop a relevant in vitro mouse liver fibrosis model, based on the central hypothesis that liver fibrosis in vitro cannot be studied using only hepatic stellate cells (HSCs)–the main producer of scar tissue during fibrosis–, but requires cultures in which at least hepatocytes are integrated. We established robust methods to generate co-culture spheroids from freshly isolated mouse hepatocytes and HSCs. Characteristics and functionality of these spheroids were analyzed by qPCR of cell-type specific markers, CYP induction and immunohistochemistry. Compound toxicity was determined by ATP-assays. Hepatocytes and HSCs maintained their cell-type specific marker expression over a 15-day culture period without major hepatocyte dedifferentiation or HSC activation. Exposure of spheroids to TGFβ can directly activate HSCs, while acetaminophen exposure mounts a hepatocyte damage dependent activation of HSCs. Pharmaceuticals with known anti-fibrotic properties, such as Valproic acid and Verteporfin, reduce HSC activation in response to hepatocyte damage in these cultures. A comparison between the fibrotic response of the spheroid co-cultures and in vivo activated HSCs showed that these 3D co-cultures are more representative than the commonly used 2D HSC monocultures. Finally, we showed that the 3D cultures can be integrated in microfluidic chips. We conclude that our hepatocyte-stellate cell-spheroid cultures are a robust in vitro model of liver fibrosis. This model could be used to further unravel the mechanism of HSC activation and facilitate the discovery of, or testing for novel anti-fibrotic compounds, as these spheroids better reproduce HSC in vivo activation compared to the more traditional 2D mono-culture models. Image 1 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01429612
Volume :
261
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biomaterials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146118766
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biomaterials.2020.120335