Abstract

Cell culture is a fundamental experimental tool for understanding cell physiology. However, translating these findings to in vivo settings has proven challenging. Replicating donor tissue conditions, including oxygen levels, is crucial for achieving meaningful results. Nevertheless, oxygen culture conditions are often overlooked, particularly in the context of chemotherapy-induced neurotoxicity. In this study, we investigated the role of oxygen levels in primary neuronal cultures by comparing neuronal performance under cisplatin exposure (1 μg/mL) in supraphysiological normoxia (representing atmospheric conditions in a standard incubator; 18.5% O2) and physioxia (representing physiologic oxygen conditions in nervous tissue; 5% O2). Experiments were also conducted to assess survival, neurite development, senescence marker expression, and proinflammatory cytokine secretion. Under control conditions, both oxygen concentration conditions exhibited similar behaviors. However, after cisplatin administration, sensory neurons cultured under supraphysiological normoxic conditions show higher mortality, exhibit an evolutionarily proinflammatory cytokine profile over time, and activate apoptotic-regulated neuron death markers. In contrast, under physiological conditions, neurons treated with cisplatin exhibited senescence marker expression and an attenuated inflammatory secretome. These results underscore the critical role of oxygen in neuronal culture, particularly in studying compounds where neuronal damage is mechanistically linked to oxidative stress. Even at identical doses of evaluated neurotoxic drugs, distinct cellular phenotypic fates can emerge, impacting translatability to the in vivo setting.

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