| Literature DB >> 33616124 |
Xiaoou Ren1, Anthony E Getschman2, Samuel Hwang3, Brian F Volkman2, Thomas Klonisch4, David Levin5, Min Zhao6, Susy Santos7, Song Liu5, Jasmine Cheng8, Francis Lin9.
Abstract
A microfluidics-based three-dimensional skin-on-chip (SoC) model is developed in this study to enable quantitative studies of transendothelial and transepithelial migration of human T lymphocytes in mimicked skin inflammatory microenvironments and to test new drug candidates. The keys results include 1) CCL20-dependent T cell transmigration is significantly inhibited by an engineered CCL20 locked dimer (CCL20LD), supporting the potential immunotherapeutic use of CCL20LD for treating skin diseases such as psoriasis; 2) transepithelial migration of T cells in response to a CXCL12 gradient mimicking T cell egress from the skin is significantly reduced by a sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) background, suggesting the role of S1P for T cell retention in inflamed skin tissues; and 3) T cell transmigration is induced by inflammatory cytokine stimulated epithelial cells in the SoC model. Collectively, the developed SoC model recreates a dynamic multi-cellular micro-environment that enables quantitative studies of T cell transmigration at a single cell level in response to physiological cutaneous inflammatory mediators and potential drugs.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33616124 PMCID: PMC8058301 DOI: 10.1039/d0lc01194k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lab Chip ISSN: 1473-0189 Impact factor: 6.799