Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5562770 Toxicology in Vitro 2017 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Human bronchial tissue was exposed to whole cigarette smoke in an air-liquid interface three-dimensional co-culture model.•Repeated whole cigarette smoke exposure decreased ciliated cell differentiation and altered goblet cell differentiation.•Repeated whole cigarette smoke exposure induced secretion of several mediators (IL-8, GRO-α, IL-1β, GM-CSF).•Secretion of these mediators was augmented with repetition of the exposure.

In vitro models of human bronchial epithelium are useful for toxicological testing because of their resemblance to in vivo tissue. We constructed a model of human bronchial tissue which has a fibroblast layer embedded in a collagen matrix directly below a fully-differentiated epithelial cell layer. The model was applied to whole cigarette smoke (CS) exposure repeatedly from an air-liquid interface culture while bronchial epithelial cells were differentiating. The effects of CS exposure on differentiation were determined by histological and gene expression analyses on culture day 21. We found a decrease in ciliated cells and perturbation of goblet cell differentiation. We also analyzed the effects of CS exposure on the inflammatory response, and observed a significant increase in secretion of IL-8, GRO-α, IL-1β, and GM-CSF. Interestingly, secretion of these mediators was augmented with repetition of whole CS exposure. Our data demonstrate the usefulness of our bronchial tissue model for in vitro testing and the importance of exposure repetition in perturbing the differentiation and inflammation processes.

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Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
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