Abstract

BackgroundInvestigation of basic chronic inflammatory mechanisms and development of new therapeutics targeting the respiratory tract requires appropriate testing systems, including those to monitor long- persistence. Human precision-cut lung slices (PCLS) have been demonstrated to mimic the human respiratory tract and have potential of an alternative, ex-vivo system to replace or augment in-vitro testing and animal models. So far, most research on PCLS has been conducted for short cultivation periods (≤72 h), while analyses of slowly metabolized therapeutics require long-term survival of PCLS in culture. In the present study, we evaluated viability, physiology and structural integrity of PCLS cultured for up to 15 days.MethodsPCLS were cultured for 15 days and various parameters were assessed at different time points.ResultsStructural integrity and viability of cultured PCLS remained constant for 15 days. Moreover, bronchoconstriction was inducible over the whole period of cultivation, though with decreased sensitivity (EC501d = 4 × 10−8 M vs. EC5015d = 4 × 10−6 M) and reduced maximum of initial airway area (1d = 0.5% vs. 15d = 18.7%). In contrast, even though still clearly inducible compared to medium control, LPS-induced TNF-α secretion decreased significantly from day 1 to day 15 of culture.ConclusionsOverall, though long-term cultivation of PCLS need further investigation for cytokine secretion, possibly on a cellular level, PCLS are feasible for bronchoconstriction studies and toxicity assays.

Highlights

  • Investigation of basic chronic inflammatory mechanisms and development of new therapeutics targeting the respiratory tract requires appropriate testing systems, including those to monitor long- persistence

  • Human precision-cut lung slices (PCLS) showed persistent viability during 15-day long-term cultivation In order to determine the viability of freshly prepared human lung tissue slices in immersion culture, PCLS were cultivated for 15 days and analyzed using different assays

  • The present study demonstrates that human PCLS can be kept in culture for up to 15 days without the loss of structural integrity, which is consistent with earlier studies focusing only on the structure of murine tissue slices [17, 18]

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Summary

Introduction

Investigation of basic chronic inflammatory mechanisms and development of new therapeutics targeting the respiratory tract requires appropriate testing systems, including those to monitor long- persistence. Human precision-cut lung slices (PCLS) have been demonstrated to mimic the human respiratory tract and have potential of an alternative, ex-vivo system to replace or augment in-vitro testing and animal models. We evaluated viability, physiology and structural integrity of PCLS cultured for up to 15 days. Respiratory diseases, both chronic and acute, account for millions of deaths every year. The very fact that of the approximately 38 million annual deaths attributed to NCD about 10.5%. In this context of understanding physiological lung behavior in-vitro, it is essential to develop new therapeutic substances. With regard to the three Rs principle, PCLS represents an Neuhaus et al Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology (2017) 12:13 alternative to in-vivo models and can help to reduce the number of animal studies [3]

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