| Literature DB >> 28239090 |
Martin Trapecar1, Avrelija Cencic2.
Abstract
The concept of functional and novel foods undoubtedly bears great potential as an asset to human health. However, this very same quest for ever new bioactive ingredients calls for reliable and distinct risk assessment as they may be potentially hazardous to human health. Most of today's methodologies still rely on decades old routines of animal trials and use of tumor-derived cell lines. Since such methodologies are not in line with the actual processes in the human body and with the 3R (replacement, reduction, refinement) concept, the results are often unreliable and misleading. Therefore, in this paper we propose the utilization of available untransformed small intestinal cell lines derived from human and pig tissue of non-tumor origin and describe several available cell models of the gut that offer a functional, close resemblance with the in vivo environment.Entities:
Keywords: cell models; functional food; gut; risk assessment; toxicology
Year: 2012 PMID: 28239090 PMCID: PMC5302223 DOI: 10.3390/foods1010040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Figure 1(a) H4-1 human small intestinal epithelial cell line; (b) PSI-1 pig small intestinal epithelial cell line; (c) TLT human monocyte/macrophage cell line; (d) Pom2 pig monocyte/macrophage cell line.
Available cell lines and cell models of the pig and human gut [8].
| Cell Line/Model | Origin | Type | Status | Species | Supplier |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIEC-6 | Small intestine | Epithelia | Normal | Human | University ofSherbrooke a |
| H4 | Small intestinal foetal tissue | Epithelia | Normal | Human | MassachusettsGeneral Hospital b |
| H4-1 | Small intestinal foetal tissue | Epithelia | Normal | Human | BioNutriTech c |
| PSI-1 | Mature small intestine | Epithelia | Normal | Pig | BioNutriTech c |
| CLAB | Enterocytes | Epithelia | Normal | Pig | BioNutriTech c |
| Pom 2 | Blood | Monocytes | Normal | Pig | BioNutriTech c |
| TLT | Blood | Monocytes | Normal | Human | BioNutriTech c |
| Gut 3D model | Functional | Normal | Human | BioNutriTech c | |
| Gut 3D model | Functional | Normal | Pig | BioNutriTech c |
a Sherbrooke, Canada; b Boston, MA, USA; c Lunel, France.
Figure 2Functional cell models in in vitro toxicology.
Figure 33D functional cell model of the gut.
Applicability of the 3D functional cell model of the gut.
| Study | Parameter/Implications | References |
|---|---|---|
| Trans-epithelial electrical resistance (TEER) | Cell differentiation, connectedness, polarization, intestinal integrity | [ |
| Bioaccessibility, absorption and biotransformation | Transition from the apical to the basal compartment and vice versa, cellular absorption, transformation | [ |
| Host-microbe interactions | Attachment, communication, migration, influence on epithelial function, simulation of normal gut microflora, their influence on biotransformation as well as absorption of bioactives | [ |
| Communication | Cell-cell, cell cross-talk, expression of cytokines, chemokines, nuclear factors, connexins... | [ |
| Immunomodulation | Expression of cytokines and nuclear factors in separated apical and basal compartments, immunoprofiling, pro- and anti-inflammatory orientation | [ |
| Custom bioassays | Combination of different strategies, combination of different cell lines, HTS integration | [ |