Spatiotemporal characterization of extracellular matrix maturation in human artificial stromal-epithelial tissue substitutes
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteDate
2024-11Referencia bibliográfica
Ávila-Fernández P, Etayo-Escanilla M, Sánchez-Porras D, Fernández-Valadés R, Campos F, Garzón I, Carriel V, Alaminos M, García-García ÓD, Chato-Astrain J. Spatiotemporal characterization of extracellular matrix maturation in human artificial stromal-epithelial tissue substitutes. BMC Biol. 2024 Nov 18;22(1):263. doi: 10.1186/s12915-024-02065-y
Résumé
Background Tissue engineering techniques offer new strategies to understand complex processes in a controlled
and reproducible system. In this study, we generated bilayered human tissue substitutes consisting of a cellular connective
tissue with a suprajacent epithelium (full-thickness stromal-epithelial substitutes or SESS) and human tissue
substitutes with an epithelial layer generated on top of an acellular biomaterial (epithelial substitutes or ESS). Both
types of artificial tissues were studied at sequential time periods to analyze the maturation process of the extracellular
matrix.
Results Regarding epithelial layer, ESS cells showed active proliferation, positive expression of cytokeratin 5, and low
expression of differentiation markers, whereas SESS epithelium showed higher differentiation levels, with a progressive
positive expression of cytokeratin 10 and claudin. Stromal cells in SESS tended to accumulate and actively
synthetize extracellular matrix components such as collagens and proteoglycans in the stromal area in direct contact
with the epithelium (zone 1), whereas these components were very scarce in ESS. Regarding the basement membrane,
ESS showed a partially differentiated structure containing fibronectin-1 and perlecan. However, SESS showed
higher basement membrane differentiation, with positive expression of fibronectin 1, perlecan, nidogen 1, chondroitin-
6-sulfate proteoglycans, agrin, and collagens types IV and VII, although this structure was negative for lumican.
Finally, both ESS and SESS proved to be useful tools for studying metabolic pathway regulation, revealing differential
activation and upregulation of the transforming growth factor-β pathway in ESS and SESS.
Conclusions These results confirm the relevance of epithelial-stromal interaction for extracellular matrix development
and differentiation, especially regarding basement membrane components, and suggest the usefulness
of bilayered artificial tissue substitutes to reproduce ex vivo the extracellular matrix maturation and development
process of human tissues.