Abstract

Development of biocompatible and functional scaffolds for tissue engineering is a major challenge, especially for development of polarised epithelia that are critical structures in tissue homeostasis. Different in vitro models of the lung epithelial barrier have been characterized using non-degradable polyethylene terephthalate membranes which limits their uses for tissue engineering. Although poly-L-lactic acid (PLLA) membranes are biodegradable, those prepared via conventional Diffusion Induced Phase Separation (DIPS) lack open-porous geometry and show limited permeability compromising their use for epithelial barrier studies. Here we used PLLA membranes prepared via a modification of the standard DIPS protocol to control the membrane surface morphology and permeability. These were bonded to cell culture inserts for use in barrier function studies. Pulmonary epithelial cells (H441) readily attached to the PLLA membranes and formed a confluent cell layer within two days. This was accompanied by a significant increase in trans-epithelial electrical resistance and correlated with the formation of tight junctions and vectorial cytokine secretion in response to TNFα. Our data suggest that a structurally polarized and functional epithelial barrier can be established on PLLA membranes produced via a non-standard DIPS protocol. Therefore, PLLA membranes have potential utility in lung tissue engineering applications requiring bio-absorbable membranes.

Highlights

  • The epithelial barrier of the skin, gastrointestinal and respiratory tract are the main interfaces between our body and the outside environment

  • This showed that after 48h we were able to detect a significant increase in Transepithelial electrical resistance (TER) in presence of dexamethasone using either poly-L-lactic acid (PLLA) (Fig 2A) or polyethylene terephthalate (PET) (Fig 2B) membranes

  • Our results showed similar increases in TER for the PLLA membranes compared with PET membranes over both time and doses of dexamethasone tested

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Summary

Introduction

The epithelial barrier of the skin, gastrointestinal and respiratory tract are the main interfaces between our body and the outside environment. Their function is to protect the body from environmental agents including pathogens and pollutants, dehydration, and heat loss. The epithelial barriers are essential for the physiological functioning of tissues and organs. Establishing a pulmonary barrier on a biodegradable scaffold

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