| Literature DB >> 29675450 |
Sarah E Blutt1, Sue E Crawford1, Sasirekha Ramani1, Winnie Y Zou1, Mary K Estes1.
Abstract
New models to study the intestine are key to understanding intestinal diseases and developing novel treatments. Intestinal organ-like culture systems (organoids and enteroids) have substantially advanced the study of the human gastrointestinal tract. Stem cell-derived cultures produce self-organizing structures that contain the multiple differentiated intestinal epithelial cell types including enterocytes, goblet, Paneth, and enteroendocrine cells. Understanding host-microbial interactions is one area in which these cultures are expediting major advancements. This review discusses how organoid and enteroid cultures are biologically and physiologically relevant systems to investigate the effects of commensal organisms and study the pathogenesis of human infectious diseases. These cultures can be established from many donors and they retain the genetic and biologic properties of the donors, which can lead to the discovery of host-specific factors that affect susceptibility to infection and result in personalized approaches to treat individuals. The continued development of these cultures to incorporate more facets of the gastrointestinal tract, including neurons, immune cells, and the microbiome, will unravel new mechanisms regulating host-microbial interactions with the long-term goal of translating findings into novel preventive or therapeutic treatments for gastrointestinal infections.Entities:
Keywords: 3D, three-dimensional; Enteroids; HBGA, histo-blood group antigen; Host-Microbial Interactions; IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; Infections; Microbiome; Organoids
Year: 2017 PMID: 29675450 PMCID: PMC5904028 DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2017.12.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol ISSN: 2352-345X
Figure 1Derivation of organoids and enteroids and modes of exposure to microbial organisms in three-dimensional or two-dimensional format. Modified from Mills and Estes.
Insights Into Human Viral Infections of Human Intestinal Enteroids
| Virus | Enteroid type | Strains | Cells infected | Responses | Innate responses | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rotavirus | HIOs | Human rotavirus replication | Enterocytes, mesenchymal cells | |||
| Rotavirus | Differentiated HIEs from adults, all small intestinal segments in 3D cultures | Human rotavirus replicates more efficiently than animal rotavirus | Enterocytes, enteroendocrine cells; not stem cells | Swelling induced by viral infection and enterotoxin treatment | Predominant type III IFN response | |
| Rotavirus | HIEs from adults | Human rotavirus replication | Antiviral testing | Selected innate response genes induced | ||
| Human norovirus | Differentiated HIEs from adults, all small intestinal segments on monolayers | Multiple human norovirus strains replicate; strain-specific requirements for replication; some require bile | Enterocytes; not stem cells | Inactivation and neutralization tested | Host-specific susceptibility to infection based on host HBGA expression | |
| Enteroviruses | HIEs from human fetal small intestine in 3D cultures | Strain-specific differences in relative replication efficiency with EV11 and CBV high and EV71 low | Strain-specific responses | |||
| Echovirus 11 | Good infections; cpe; cell death; mislocalization of occludin; infectious virus produced in levels similar to Caco-2 cells | Enteroendocrine cells; not goblet cells | Differential induction of 350 transcripts; cytokines, chemokines; IFN-stimulated genes | |||
| Coxsackievirus B | Good infections by immunofluorescence and viral RNA | Differential induction of 13 transcripts | ||||
| Enterovirus 71 | Lower levels of replication | No significant induction of transcripts detected |
CBV, Coxsackievirus B; cpe, cytopathic effect; EV11, Echovirus 11; EV71, Enterovirus 71; HIE, human intestinal enteroid; HIO, human intestinal organoid.
Figure 2Future platform development of enteroids and organoids to facilitate studies with microbial organisms.