Literature DB >> 29519653

Controlled cell morphology and liver-specific function of engineered primary hepatocytes by fibroblast layer cell densities.

Yusuke Sakai1, Makiko Koike2, Daisuke Kawahara2, Hideko Hasegawa2, Tomomi Murai2, Kosho Yamanouchi2, Akihiko Soyama2, Masaaki Hidaka2, Mitsuhisa Takatsuki2, Fumihiko Fujita2, Tamotsu Kuroki2, Susumu Eguchi3.   

Abstract

Engineered primary hepatocytes, including co-cultured hepatocyte sheets, are an attractive to basic scientific and clinical researchers because they maintain liver-specific functions, have reconstructed cell polarity, and have high transplantation efficiency. However, co-culture conditions regarding engineered primary hepatocytes were suboptimal in promoting these advantages. Here we report that the hepatocyte morphology and liver-specific function levels are controlled by the normal human diploid fibroblast (TIG-118 cell) layer cell density. Primary rat hepatocytes were plated onto TIG-118 cells, previously plated 3 days before at 1.04, 5.21, and 26.1×103 cells/cm2. Hepatocytes plated onto lower TIG-118 cell densities expanded better during the early culture period. The hepatocytes gathered as colonies and only exhibited small adhesion areas because of the pushing force from proliferating TIG-118 cells. The smaller areas of each hepatocyte result in the development of bile canaliculi. The highest density of TIG-118 cells downregulated albumin synthesis activity of hepatocytes. The hepatocytes may have undergone apoptosis associated with high TGF-β1 concentration and necrosis due to a lack of oxygen. These occurrences were supported by apoptotic chromatin condensation and high expression of both proteins HIF-1a and HIF-1b. Three types of engineered hepatocyte/fibroblast sheets comprising different TIG-118 cell densities were harvested after 4 days of hepatocyte culture and showed a complete cell sheet format without any holes. Hepatocyte morphology and liver-specific function levels are controlled by TIG-118 cell density, which helps to design better engineered hepatocytes for future applications such as in vitro cell-based assays and transplantable hepatocyte tissues.
Copyright © 2018 The Society for Biotechnology, Japan. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Albumin; Cell sheet; Fibroblast; Gene expression; Hepatocyte; Morphology; Tissue engineering

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29519653     DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiosc.2018.02.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biosci Bioeng        ISSN: 1347-4421            Impact factor:   2.894


  2 in total

1.  New and effective method to develop primary hepatocytes from liver cancer patients.

Authors:  Jia-Yan Li; Li-Li Wang; Jing Fan; Du-Xian Liu; Jian-Bo Han; Yu-Feng Zhang; Dan-Dan Yin; Yong-Xiang Yi
Journal:  Exp Biol Med (Maywood)       Date:  2022-04-26

2.  Development of Bifunctional Three-Dimensional Cysts from Chemically Induced Liver Progenitors.

Authors:  Yu Huang; Yusuke Sakai; Takanobu Hara; Takeshi Katsuda; Takahiro Ochiya; Tomohiko Adachi; Masaaki Hidaka; Wei-Li Gu; Susumu Eguchi
Journal:  Stem Cells Int       Date:  2019-09-03       Impact factor: 5.443

  2 in total

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