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Modulation of hepatic cellular tight junctions via coculture with cholangiocytes enables non-destructive bile recovery.

Authors :
Tokito, Fumiya
Kiyofuji, Mikito
Choi, Hyunjin
Nishikawa, Masaki
Takezawa, Toshiaki
Sakai, Yasuyuki
Source :
Journal of Bioscience & Bioengineering. May2024, Vol. 137 Issue 5, p403-411. 9p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Estimation of the biliary clearance of drugs and their metabolites in humans is crucial for characterizing hepatobiliary disposition and potential drug-drug interactions. Sandwich-cultured hepatocytes, while useful for in vitro bile analysis, require cell destruction for bile recovery, limiting long-term or repeated dose drug effect evaluations. To overcome this limitation, we investigated the feasibility of coculturing a human hepatic carcinoma cell line (HepG2-NIAS cells) and a human cholangiocarcinoma cell line (TFK-1 cells) using the collagen vitrigel membrane in a variety of coculture configurations. The coculture configuration with physiological bile flow increased the permeability of fluorescein-labeled bile acids (CLF) across the HepG2-NIAS cell layer by approximately 1.2-fold compared to the HepG2-NIAS monoculture. This enhancement was caused by paracellular leakage due to the loosened tight junctions of HepG2-NIAS, confirmed by the use of an inhibitor for bile acid transporters, the increase of permeability of dextran, and the decrease of the transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) value. Based on the results of loosening hepatic tight junctions via coculture with TFK-1 in the CLF permeability assay, we next attempted to collect the CLF accumulated in the bile canaliculi of HepG2-NIAS. The recovery of the CLF accumulated in the bile canaliculi was increased 1.4 times without disrupting hepatic tight junctions by the coculture of HepG2-NIAS cells and TFK-1 cells compared to the monoculture of HepG2-NIAS cells. This non-destructive bile recovery has the potential as a tool for estimating the biliary metabolite and provides valuable insights to improve in vitro bile analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13891723
Volume :
137
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Bioscience & Bioengineering
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176407721
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiosc.2024.01.017