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Analysis of the response to cigarette smoke exposure in cell coculture and monoculture based on bionic-lung microfluidic chips

In vitro toxicity assessment studies with various experimental models and exposure modalities frequently generate diverse outcomes. In the prevalent experimental, aerosol pollutants are dissolved in culture medium through capture for exposure to two-dimensional planar cellular models in multiwell pl...

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Published in:Analytica chimica acta 2024-04, Vol.1300, p.342446-342446, Article 342446
Main Authors: Li, Zezhi, Feng, Boyang, Li, Xiang, Zhao, Junwei, Liu, Kejian, Xie, Fuwei, Xie, Jianping
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:In vitro toxicity assessment studies with various experimental models and exposure modalities frequently generate diverse outcomes. In the prevalent experimental, aerosol pollutants are dissolved in culture medium through capture for exposure to two-dimensional planar cellular models in multiwell plates via immersion. However, this approach can generate restricted and inconclusive experimental data, significantly constraining the applicability of risk assessment outcomes. Herein, the in vitro cocultivation of lung epithelial and/or vascular endothelial cells was performed using self-designed bionic-lung microfluidic chip housing a gas-concentration gradient generator (GCGG) unit. Exposure experiments involving a concentration gradient of cigarette smoke (CS) aerosol were then conducted through an original assembled real-time aerosol exposure system. Transcriptomic analysis revealed a potential involvement of the cGMP-signaling pathway following online CS aerosol exposure on different cell culture models. Furthermore, distinct responses to different concentrations of CS aerosol exposure on different culture models were highlighted by detecting inflammation- and oxidative stress-related biomarkers (i.e., cell viability, reactive oxygen species, nitric oxide, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α, GM-CSF, malondialdehyde, and superoxide dismutase). The results underscore the importance of improving chip biomimicry while addressing multi-throughput demands, given the substantial influence of the coculture model on cellular responses triggered by CS. Furthermore, the coculture model exhibited a mutually beneficial protective effect on cells at low CS concentrations within the GCGG unit, yet revealed a mutually amplified damaging effect at higher CS concentrations in contrast to the monoculture model. [Display omitted] •Tradeoff between bionicity and test flux provides a new on-chip exposure strategy.•Coculture model exhibit complex biological effects after exposure to cigarette smoke.•cGMP signaling pathway is related to the effect of smoke on different culture models.
ISSN:0003-2670
1873-4324
DOI:10.1016/j.aca.2024.342446