| Literature DB >> 27600213 |
Anastasia Bachmann1, Matthias Moll2, Eric Gottwald3, Cordula Nies4, Roman Zantl5, Helga Wagner6, Britta Burkhardt7, Juan J Martínez Sánchez8, Ruth Ladurner9, Wolfgang Thasler10, Georg Damm11, Andreas K Nussler12.
Abstract
One of the main challenges in drug development is the prediction of in vivo toxicity based on in vitro data. The standard cultivation system for primary human hepatocytes is based on monolayer cultures, even if it is known that these conditions result in a loss of hepatocyte morphology and of liver-specific functions, such as drug-metabolizing enzymes and transporters. As it has been demonstrated that hepatocytes embedded between two sheets of collagen maintain their function, various hydrogels and scaffolds for the 3D cultivation of hepatocytes have been developed. To further improve or maintain hepatic functions, 3D cultivation has been combined with perfusion. In this manuscript, we discuss the benefits and drawbacks of different 3D microfluidic devices. For most systems that are currently available, the main issues are the requirement of large cell numbers, the low throughput, and expensive equipment, which render these devices unattractive for research and the drug-developing industry. A higher acceptance of these devices could be achieved by their simplification and their compatibility with high-throughput, as both aspects are of major importance for a user-friendly device.Entities:
Keywords: drug-induced hepatotoxicity; hydrogels; in vitro model; long-term culture; primary human hepatocytes; scaffolds; three-dimensional (3D) cell culture; two-dimensional (2D) cell culture
Year: 2015 PMID: 27600213 PMCID: PMC4996383 DOI: 10.3390/microarrays4010064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microarrays (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3905
Advantages and drawbacks of cultivation systems for hepatocytes.
| Cultivation | Advantages | Disadvantages | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Monolayer | Gold standard for drug metabolism and toxicity | Rapid loss of morphology and cell polarity | [ |
| Ideal for testing interindividual and interspecies differences in metabolism | Rapid loss of drug metabolizing capability, decrease of albumin production and cell-cell interaction) | ||
| Maintenance of key functions as carbohydrate metabolism and plasma protein synthesis (24–72 h) | Limited availability | ||
| Co-culture | Improved functionality of all cell types | No real standard established | [ |
| Increased expression of phase I and phase II enzymes | High variability between different laboratories | ||
| Maintenance of cell morphology | |||
| Inducibility of CYPs | |||
|
| |||
| Hydrogels, scaffolds scaffold-free | Long-term maintenance of liver-specific functions | Lack of established standards | [ |
| Increased sensitivity towards drugs | Not adjusted to high throughput | ||
| Long-term expression of phase I and phase II enzymes | Cell recovery for further analysis is difficult | ||
| Co-culture with liver-drived cell types | Improved expression of phase I and phase II enzymes, Including inducibility by drugs | No real standard established | [ |
| Not adjusted to high throughput, high variability regarding cell viability and differentiation | |||
| Maintenance of cell polarity, cell-cell contacts and bile canaliculi | |||
| Mimicks | |||
| Longer cell viability | |||
| Microfluidic devices | Sustained liver like cell functionality and increased liver specific functions | No standardized system available so far | [ |
| Not adjusted to high throughput | |||
| Precisely adjusted flow/drug concentrations | |||
| Enable microscopic examination | |||
| Formation of a sinusoid-like shape (HepaChip®) | |||
| Fast differentiation of the cells after flow induction |
Overview of static 3D cultivation systems for hepatocytes.
| 3D System | Source | Cell Type | Observation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Natural | Collagen | Human hepatocytes | Sensitivity to acetaminophen-induced intoxication | [ |
| Matrigel | Human Hepatocytes | Enhanced formation of bile canalicular networks | [ | |
| Synthetic | PEG | Functional groups can be attached to macromolecules | [ | |
| +PGLA | Human hepatocytes | Consistent urea synthesis and increased CYP3A4 activity | [ | |
| +Heparin | Rat hepatocytes | Stable urea and albumin synthesis for more than 3 weeks | [ | |
| +RGD | Rat hepatocytes | Spheroid formation, maintenance of urea and albumin production for more than 4 weeks | [ | |
| PuraMatrix™ | Rat hepatocytes | Higher albumin and urea levels for up to 3 weeks | [ | |
|
| ||||
| Natural | Chitosan | Provision of adhesion for hepatocytes | [ | |
| +Heparin/alginate | Increased albumin synthesis | [ | ||
| +GHA | Increased albumin secretion and urea synthesis | [ | ||
| Alginate | Rat hepatocytes | Cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions, phase I and phase II activity stable for one week, high urea and albumin synthesis | [ | |
| Synthetic | PVA | Rat hepatocytes | Urea synthesis maintained over 5 days | [ |
| PLA | Rat hepatocytes | Maintenance of albumin and urea synthesis as well as CYP1A and UGT-activity | [ | |
| PS | Rat hepatocytes | Higher activity of CYP1A2, CYP2B1, and CYP3A2 | [ | |
| Human hepatocytes | Higher activity of CYP2B6 and CYP3A4 | [ | ||
|
| ||||
| Spheroids | Human hepatocytes | Metabolism of lamotrigine and salbutamol | [ | |
| Nanoculture plate | HepG2 | Enhanced expression of albumin, CYPs and liver-enriched transcription factors (HNF4-α and C/EBPα) | [ |
Overview of 3D flow culture systems for hepatocytes.
| 3D System | Cell Type | Observation | Reference | Manufacturer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hollow fiber bioreactor | Rat hepatocytes Human hepatocytes | Increased albumin synthesis and diclofenac toxicity higher expression of CYP1A2, CYP3A4/5, CYP2C9, CYP2D6, CYP2B6, transporters, and phase II enzymes | [ | Unisyn |
| Alginate encapsulated hepatocytes in the bioreactor | Rat hepatocytes | Enhanced biotransformation, CYP inducibility, albumin and urea secretion | [ | Sartorius Stedim |
| Multichamber modular bioreactor | Human hepatocytes | Up-regulation of CYP1A1, 1A2, 2B6, 2C9, 3A4, UGT, MDR1, and MRP2 | [ | University of Pisa |
| Quasi-Vivo® | Human hepatocytes | Enables investigation of cross-talk between different cell types | [ | Kirkstall |
| LiverChip | Human hepatocytes | Maintained mRNA-levels of Phase I/II-enzymes over 7 days, higher or similar CYP-activities after day 4 | [ | CN Bio Innovations Limited |
| HepaChip® | Human hepatocytes | Up-regulation of CYP3A4, CYP2A1, and phase II enzymes | [ | NMI Reutlingen |
| 3D-KITChip | HepG2, rat hepatocytes | Higher level of differentiation | [ | KIT |
Figure 1The viability of primary human hepatocytes seeded into the r-3D-KITChip. (a) Image of the cavities of the r-3D-KITChip; (b) Bright-field images of primary human hepatocytes seeded into the r-3D-KITChip and in 2D (upper part). In the lower part, dead cells have been differentiated from the living cells by staining the living cells with 2 μM Calcein AM, while dead cells were stained with 4 μM ethidium homodimer. Pictures were taken with an Evos microscope from Peqlab Biosystems (Erlangen, Germany). The scale bar corresponds to 400 μm; (c) In order to evaluate cell survival of primary human hepatocytes, resazurin conversion into resorufin was measured and normalized to mg protein in comparison to 2D cultivation conditions. The graphic was drawn with the GraphPad Prism software (GraphPad Software, version 5.01, San Diego, CA, USA).
Figure 2Functional parameters of primary human hepatocytes in the r-3D-KITChip and under 2D monolayer conditions on collagen coated cell culture plates. After attachment over night and perfusion for 24 h in the r-3D-KITChip, the culture medium was replaced by a buffer containing 1 mM magnesium chloride and 1 mM sodium pyruvate. The perfusion was continued for 24 h and cell culture supernatants were used for measuring basal glucose levels. (a) Basal glucose production; (b) Urea synthesis; (c) multidrug resistant protein 1 (MRP1) activity. Cells were cultivated either in the r-3D-KITChip or under 2D conditions in the presence of 5-carboxyfluorescein diacetate (5-CFDA). After uptake, 5-CFDA was metabolized into the fluorophore 5-CF, which was detected in the cell culture supernatants after the indicated time points. The graphs were drawn with the GraphPad Prism software (GraphPad Software, version 5.01). The values are depicted as mean and standard deviation of three donors.
Figure 3Cultivation in the r-3D-KITChip sensitizes primary human hepatocytes to acetaminophen-induced intoxication. The cells were cultivated in the presence of acetaminophen (100 μM and 1000 μM) for 24 h. Their viability was determined by the conversion of resazurin into resorufin and is depicted as % of untreated cells. The graph was drawn with GraphPad Prism software (GraphPad Software, version 5.01). Values are depicted as mean and standard deviation of three donors/experiments.
Figure 4Primary human hepatocytes entrapped in rat-tail collagen combined with continuous flow in the µ-Slide VI 0.4 show a higher viability and glucose production. Cells were either seeded in 2D or 3D in 96-well plates (2.5 × 104 cells/well) or entrapped in collagen in the µ-Slide VI 0.4 (1.5 × 105 cells/µ-Slide VI 0.4) and cultivated for 1 day or 7 days. To evaluate cell viability, the cells were stained either with 2 μM Calcein AM to visualize living cells or with 4 μM ethidium homodimer to visualize dead cells, while the turnover of resazurin to resorufin was measured in parallel. The glucose production was measured from cell culture supernatants. (a) Live/dead staining of primary human hepatocytes on day one and day seven. Pictures were taken with an Evos microscope from Peqlab Biosystems (Erlangen, Germany); (b) Comparison of resazurin turnover and glucose production. Cell viability is depicted as % of viable cells compared to day one. The graphs were drawn with the GraphPad Prism software (GraphPad Software, version 5.01). The values are depicted as mean and standard deviation of three donors/experiments.