A Fast Scoring of Human Primary Respiratory Epithelia Grown at Air-Liquid Interface (ALI) to Assess Epithelial Morphology in Research and Personalized Medicine Settings

In recent years, increasingly complex ALI protocols involving specialized, albeit laboratory-specific media have been established, while at the same time, many studies compile the data of only a few ALI donors in spite of site-, protocol- and donor-specific differentiation. We describe a simple morp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of personalized medicine 2024-01, Vol.14 (1), p.109
Hauptverfasser: Lutsch, Christopher T, Feng, Longhua, Gómez Hohn, Ana, Brandt, Lennart, Tamm, Stephanie, Janciauskiene, Sabina, Stanke, Frauke, Jonigk, Danny, Dittrich, Anna-Maria, Braubach, Peter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In recent years, increasingly complex ALI protocols involving specialized, albeit laboratory-specific media have been established, while at the same time, many studies compile the data of only a few ALI donors in spite of site-, protocol- and donor-specific differentiation. We describe a simple morphology scoring protocol using histology material derived from epithelia grown on ALI inserts in parallel to other, more complex readouts. Among more than 100 ALI inserts derived from different donors, significant differences in layer score ( = 0.001) and goblet cell score ( = 0.002) were observed when ALI epithelia derived from explanted lung material were compared to trachea-derived ALI cultures. Cortisol withdrawal for the final 2 days of ALI cultures influenced goblet cell density ( = 0.001). While the histology score provides less resolution than FACS- or OMICs- based single cell analyses, the use of a subportion of the ALI epithelia grown on inserts makes it feasible to combine morphology assessment and other readouts of the same insert. This allows us to control for basic ALI morphology in research and personalized medicine settings in order to assess and, if desired, control for the impact of ALI culture protocols, site- and donor-specific influences on outcome of studies of ALI-derived epithelia.
ISSN:2075-4426
2075-4426
DOI:10.3390/jpm14010109