| Literature DB >> 35739419 |
Amir Bein1,2, Cicely W Fadel1,3,4, Ben Swenor1, Wuji Cao1, Rani K Powers1,5, Diogo M Camacho1,6, Arash Naziripour1, Andrew Parsons3, Nina LoGrande1, Sanjay Sharma1, Seongmin Kim1, Sasan Jalili-Firoozinezhad1,7, Jennifer Grant1, David T Breault3,8,9, Junaid Iqbal10, Asad Ali10, Lee A Denson11,12, Sean R Moore13, Rachelle Prantil-Baun1, Girija Goyal1, Donald E Ingber14,15,16.
Abstract
Environmental enteric dysfunction (EED)-a chronic inflammatory condition of the intestine-is characterized by villus blunting, compromised intestinal barrier function and reduced nutrient absorption. Here we show that essential genotypic and phenotypic features of EED-associated intestinal injury can be reconstituted in a human intestine-on-a-chip lined by organoid-derived intestinal epithelial cells from patients with EED and cultured in nutrient-deficient medium lacking niacinamide and tryptophan. Exposure of the organ chip to such nutritional deficiencies resulted in congruent changes in six of the top ten upregulated genes that were comparable to changes seen in samples from patients with EED. Chips lined with healthy epithelium or with EED epithelium exposed to nutritional deficiencies resulted in severe villus blunting and barrier dysfunction, and in the impairment of fatty acid uptake and amino acid transport; and the chips with EED epithelium exhibited heightened secretion of inflammatory cytokines. The organ-chip model of EED-associated intestinal injury may facilitate the analysis of the molecular, genetic and nutritional bases of the disease and the testing of candidate therapeutics for it.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35739419 DOI: 10.1038/s41551-022-00899-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Biomed Eng ISSN: 2157-846X Impact factor: 29.234