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Download fileDevelopment of Arrayed Colonic Organoids for Screening of Secretagogues Associated with Enterotoxins
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posted on 2017-12-27, 00:00 authored by Dulan
B. Gunasekara, Matthew DiSalvo, Yuli Wang, Daniel L. Nguyen, Mark I. Reed, Jennifer Speer, Christopher E. Sims, Scott T. Magness, Nancy L. AllbrittonEnterotoxins
increase intestinal fluid secretion through modulation
of ion channels as well as activation of the enteric nervous and immune
systems. Colonic organoids, also known as colonoids, are functionally
and phenotypically similar to in vivo colonic epithelium and have
been used to study intestinal ion transport and subsequent water flux
in physiology and disease models. In conventional cultures, organoids
exist as spheroids embedded within a hydrogel patty of extracellular
matrix, and they form at multiple depths, impairing efficient imaging
necessary to capture data from statistically relevant sample sizes.
To overcome these limitations, an analytical platform with colonic
organoids localized to the planar surface of a hydrogel layer was
developed. The arrays of densely packed colonoids (140 μm average
diameter, 4 colonoids/mm2) were generated in a 96-well
plate, enabling assay of the response of hundreds of organoids so
that organoid subpopulations with distinct behaviors were identifiable.
Organoid cell types, monolayer polarity, and growth were similar to
those embedded in hydrogel. An automated imaging and analysis platform
efficiently tracked over time swelling due to forskolin and fluid
movement across the cell monolayer stimulated by cholera toxin. The
platform was used to screen compounds associated with the enteric
nervous and immune systems for their effect on fluid movement across
epithelial cells. Prostaglandin E2 promoted increased water flux in
a subset of organoids that resulted in organoid swelling, confirming
a role for this inflammatory mediator in diarrheal conditions but
also illustrating organoid differences in response to an identical
stimulus. By allowing sampling of a large number of organoids, the
arrayed organoid platform permits identification of organoid subpopulations
intermixed within a larger group of nonresponding organoids. This
technique will enable automated, large-scale screening of the impact
of drugs, toxins, and other compounds on colonic physiology.