Co-culturing Human Intestinal Enteroid Monolayers with Innate Immune Cells

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Abstract

The coordinated interaction between the intestinal epithelium and immune cells is required to maintain proper barrier function and mucosal host defenses to the harsh external environment of the gut lumen. Complementary to in vivo models, there is a need for practical and reproducible in vitro models that employ primary human cells to confirm and advance our understanding of mucosal immune responses under physiologic and pathophysiologic conditions. Here we describe the methods to co-culture human intestinal stem cell-derived enteroids grown as confluent monolayers on permeable supports with primary human innate immune cells (e.g., monocyte-derived macrophages and polymorphonuclear neutrophils). This co-culture model reconstructs the cellular framework of the human intestinal epithelial-immune niche with distinct apical and basolateral compartments to recreate host responses to luminal and submucosal challenges, respectively. Enteroid-immune co-cultures enable multiple outcome measures to interrogate important biological processes such as epithelial barrier integrity, stem cell biology, cellular plasticity, epithelial-immune cells crosstalk, immune cell effector functions, changes in gene expression (i.e., transcriptomic, proteomic, epigenetic), and host-microbiome interactions.

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APA

Staab, J. F., Lemme-Dumit, J. M., Latanich, R., Pasetti, M. F., & Zachos, N. C. (2023). Co-culturing Human Intestinal Enteroid Monolayers with Innate Immune Cells. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 2650, pp. 207–223). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-3076-1_16

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