Abstract
AbstractEnteric neurons are critical in maintaining organ homeostasis within the small intestine, and their dysregulation are implicated in gastrointestinal disorders and neurodegenerative diseases. Most in vitro models lack enteric innervation, limiting basic discovery and disease modeling research. Here, a high‐throughput 3D microphysiological system (MPS), or organ chip is presented that supports a primary epithelial monolayer interfacing directly with encapsulated primary enteric neurons. The device features twelve 3D MPSs per device and gravity‐driven flow via a laboratory rocker to induce biomimetic shear stress on the epithelium culture and provide continuous nutrient presentation. Intestinal and neural tissue exhibited expected morphologies. Neural gene upregulation in the epithelium suggests RNA contamination from proximal enteric neurons extending neurites toward the epithelial monolayer. With the enteric nervous system (ENS), barrier integrity significantly increased for both TEER and permeability assays, a 1.25‐fold greater resistance and 10% lower permeability as compared to epithelium cultured alone. The presence of the ENS resulted in a significant (1.4‐fold) reduction in epidermal growth factor (EGF). Additionally, several key epithelial genes are compared between duodenal tissue and epithelial monolayers with and without neurons present. Results demonstrated changes in cytokine gene expression and WNT pathways, highlighting innervation is essential to create more biomimetic and physiologically relevant in vitro models.
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