Tissue-Engineered Human Asthmatic Bronchial Equivalents ()
Abstract
The isolation of human bronchial epithelial (HBEC) and
fibroblastic cells (HBFC) from biopsies of asthmatic and
non-asthmatic volunteers provided unique cellular materials
to be used for the production of bioengineered bronchial
equivalents (BE) in vitro. The HBEC are grown on a
mesenchymal layer seeded with HBFC and the BE can be
maintained for at least 15 days in culture. Under the BE
culture conditions established previously, HBEC undergo
differentiation into ciliated and goblet cells, within a
pseudostratified organization comparable to human bronchi.
We published previously the results from histologic and
functional analyses of such BE produced exclusively using
non-asthmatic HBEC and HBFC. We report here the comparative
analyses of BE produced with non-asthmatic and
asthmatic living HBEC and HBFC (naBE and aBE, respectively).
Our data indicated that all asthmatic HBEC
populations grown on a mesenchymal layer, containing nonasthmatic
HBFC, slowly reached a confluent state but then
detached from the matrix upon culture time. These BE appear
to be very good models to study the mechanisms involved
in asthma in vitro.
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"Tissue-Engineered Human Asthmatic Bronchial Equivalents," Materials Sciences and Applications, Vol. 1 No. 1, 2009, pp. 17-26.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.