Structural polarity and functional bile canaliculi in rat hepatocyte spheroids |
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Authors: | Abu-Absi Susan Fugett Friend Julie R Hansen Linda K Hu Wei-Shou |
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Affiliation: | Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, USA. |
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Abstract: | Primary hepatocytes self-assemble into spheroids that possess tight junctions and microvilli-lined channels. We hypothesized that polarity develops gradually and that the channels structurally and functionally resemble bile canaliculi. Immunofluorescence labeling of apical and basolateral proteins demonstrated reorganization of the membrane proteins into a polarized distribution during spheroid culture. By means of fluorescent dextran diffusion and confocal microscopy, an extensive network of channels was revealed in the interior of the spheroids. These channels connected over several planes and opened to pores on the surface. To examine the content of apical proteins in the channel membranes, the bile canalicular enzyme dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPPIV) was localized using a fluorogenic substrate, Ala-Pro-cresyl violet. The results show that DPPIV activity is heterogeneously distributed in spheroids and localized in part to channels. Bile acid excretion was then investigated to demonstrate functional polarity. A fluorescent bile acid analogue, fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled glycocholate, was taken up into the spheroids and excreted into bile canalicular channels. Due to the structural polarity of spheroids and their ability to excrete bile into channels, they are a unique three-dimensional model of in vitro liver tissue self-assembly. (Videoanimations of some results are available at http://hugroup.cems.umn.edu/research_movies). |
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Keywords: | 3D culture multicellular aggregates tissue engineering bile acid excretion dipeptidyl peptidase IV |
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