Nasal Epithelial Cells Can Act as a Physiological Surrogate for Paediatric Asthma Studies


Autoria(s): Thavagnanam, Surendran; Parker, Jeremy C; McBrien, Michael E; Skibinski, Grzegorz; Shields, Michael D; Heaney, Liam G
Data(s)

01/01/2014

Resumo

Introduction: Differentiated paediatric epithelial cells can be used to study the role of epithelial cells in asthma. Nasal epithelial cells are easier to obtain and may act as a surrogate for bronchial epithelium in asthma studies. We assessed the suitability of nasal epithelium from asthmatic children to be a surrogate for bronchial epithelium using air-liquid interface cultures.<br/><br/>Methods: Paired nasal and bronchial epithelial cells from asthmatic children (n = 9) were differentiated for 28 days under unstimulated and IL-13-stimulated conditions. Morphological and physiological markers were analysed using immunocytochemistry, transepithelial-electrical-resistance, Quantitative Real-time-PCR, ELISA and multiplex cytokine/chemokine analysis.<br/><br/>Results: Physiologically, nasal epithelial cells from asthmatic children exhibit similar cytokine responses to stimulation with IL-13 compared with paired bronchial epithelial cells. Morphologically however, nasal epithelial cells differed significantly from bronchial epithelial cells from asthmatic patients under unstimulated and IL-13-stimulated conditions. Nasal epithelial cells exhibited lower proliferation/differentiation rates and lower percentages of goblet and ciliated cells when unstimulated, while exhibiting a diminished and varied response to IL-13.<br/><br/>Conclusions: We conclude that morphologically, nasal epithelial cells would not be a suitable surrogate due to a significantly lower rate of proliferation and differentiation of goblet and ciliated cells. Physiologically, nasal epithelial cells respond similarly to exogenous stimulation with IL-13 in cytokine production and could be used as a physiological surrogate in the event that bronchial epithelial cells are not available.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/nasal-epithelial-cells-can-act-as-a-physiological-surrogate-for-paediatric-asthma-studies(797a6e3a-3082-4e79-b4ea-f422571e0c40).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0085802

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/ws/files/11282636/nasal.pdf

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Thavagnanam , S , Parker , J C , McBrien , M E , Skibinski , G , Shields , M D & Heaney , L G 2014 , ' Nasal Epithelial Cells Can Act as a Physiological Surrogate for Paediatric Asthma Studies ' PLoS ONE , vol 9 , no. 1 , e85802 . DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0085802

Palavras-Chave #asthma #cell differentiation #cell physiology #children #cytokines #epithelial cells #epithelium #Secretion
Tipo

article