AI Article Synopsis

  • Three-dimensional (3D) culture systems mimic in vivo conditions, utilizing sodium-alginate (Na-alg) to create calcium-alginate (Ca-alg) scaffolds suitable for drug delivery and tissue engineering due to their biocompatibility and stability.
  • Four variations of Ca-alg beads were prepared for encapsulating human hepatoma (Huh-7) cells, and after 7 days of dynamic culture, nearly 100% cell viability was observed alongside organized cell structures like spheroids and channel-like configurations.
  • The 3D cultures maintained vital liver functions, such as albumin production and CYP1A activity, while exhibiting specific receptors for hepatitis C virus, suggesting the potential for advanced viral culture systems and further in vitro

Article Abstract

Three-dimensional (3D) culture systems have been introduced to provide cells with a biomimetic environment that is similar to in vivo conditions. Among the polymeric molecules available, sodium-alginate (Na-alg) salt is a material that is currently employed in different areas of drug delivery and tissue engineering, because it offers biocompatibility and optimal chemical properties, and its gelation with calcium chloride provides calcium-alginate (Ca-alg) scaffolds with mechanical stability and relative permeability. In this work, four different preparations of Ca-alg beads with varying Na-alg viscosity and concentration were used for a human hepatoma cell line (Huh-7) encapsulation. The effects of Ca-alg bead preparation on structural cell organization, liver-specific functions, and the expression of specific receptors implicated in hepatotropic virus permissivity were evaluated. Hepatic cells were cultured in 500 μm diameter Ca-alg beads for 7 days under dynamic conditions. For all culture systems, cell viability reached almost 100% at day 7. Cell proliferation was concomitantly followed by hepatocyte organization in aggregates, which adopted two different morphologies (spheroid aggregates or multicellular channel-like structures), depending on Ca-alg bead preparation. These cellular organizations established a real 3D hepatocyte architecture with cell polarity, cell junctions, and abundant bile canaliculi possessing microvillus-lined channels. The functionality of these 3D cultures was confirmed by the production of albumin and the exhibition of CYP1A activity over culture time, which were variable, according to Ca-alg bead condition. The expression of specific receptors of hepatitis C virus by Huh-7 cells suggests encouraging data for the further development of a new viral culture system in Ca-alg beads. In summary, this 3D hepatic cell culture represents a promising physiologically relevant system for further in vitro studies and demonstrates that an adequate encapsulation condition can be selected for each target application in liver tissue engineering, specifically in viral studies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ten.TEA.2012.0139DOI Listing

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