AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers created a culture model for studying human colonic neoplasia by isolating and maintaining colonic crypts from both normal and adenoma tissues in a 3D environment.
  • Normal colonic crypts maintained their structure for 3-5 days, demonstrating a natural progression from cell growth to differentiation, while adenoma structures lasted for months and showed continuous growth.
  • Immunohistochemical analysis revealed distinct expressions of stem cell and differentiation markers, helping to understand how these processes differ between healthy and abnormal colonic cells.

Article Abstract

In order to advance a culture model of human colonic neoplasia, we developed methods for the isolation and in vitro maintenance of intact colonic crypts from normal human colon tissue and adenomas. Crypts were maintained in three-dimensional Matrigel culture with a simple, serum-free, low Ca(2+) (0.15 mM) medium. Intact colonic crypts from normal human mucosa were viably maintained for 3-5 days with preservation of the in situ crypt-like architecture, presenting a distinct base and apex. Abnormal structures from adenoma tissue could be maintained through multiple passages (up to months), with expanding buds/tubules. Immunohistochemical markers for intestinal stem cells (Lgr5), growth (Ki67), differentiation (E-cadherin, cytokeratin 20 (CK20) and mucin 2 (MUC2)) and epithelial turnover (Bax, cleaved Caspase-3), paralleled the changes in function. The epithelial cells in normal crypts followed the physiological sequence of progression from proliferation to differentiation to dissolution in a spatially and temporally appropriate manner. Lgr5 expression was seen in a few basal cells of freshly isolated crypts, but was not detected after 1-3 days in culture. After 24 h in culture, crypts from normal colonic tissue continued to show strong Ki67 and MUC2 expression at the crypt base, with a gradual decrease over time such that by days 3-4 Ki67 was not expressed. The differentiation marker CK20 increased over the same period, eventually becoming intense throughout the whole crypt. In adenoma-derived structures, expression of markers for all stages of progression persisted for the entire time in culture. Lgr5 showed expression in a few select cells after months in culture. Ki67 and MUC2 were largely associated with the proliferative budding regions while CK20 was localized to the parent structure. This ex vivo culture model of normal and adenomatous crypts provides a readily accessible tool to help understand the growth and differentiation process in human colonic epithelium.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4108175PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/labinvest.2013.145DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

human colonic
12
colonic crypts
12
crypts normal
12
crypts
8
culture
8
culture model
8
intact colonic
8
normal human
8
lgr5 expression
8
ki67 muc2
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!