Human pancreatic ductal organoids with controlled polarity provide a novel ex vivo tool to study epithelial cell physiology

Author:

Varga Árpád,Madácsy Tamara,Görög Marietta,Kiss Aletta,Susánszki Petra,Szabó Viktória,Jójárt Boldizsár,Dudás Krisztina,Farkas Gyula,Szederkényi Edit,Lázár György,Farkas Attila,Ayaydin Ferhan,Pallagi Petra,Maléth JózsefORCID

Abstract

AbstractEpithelial ion and fluid secretion determine the physiological functions of a broad range of organs, such as the lung, liver, or pancreas. The molecular mechanism of pancreatic ion secretion is challenging to investigate due to the limited access to functional human ductal epithelia. Patient-derived organoids may overcome these limitations, however direct accessibility of the apical membrane is not solved. In addition, due to the vectorial transport of ions and fluid the intraluminal pressure in the organoids is elevated, which may hinder the study of physiological processes. To overcome these, we developed an advanced culturing method for human pancreatic organoids based on the removal of the extracellular matrix that induced an apical-to-basal polarity switch also leading to reversed localization of proteins with polarized expression. The cells in the apical-out organoids had a cuboidal shape, whereas their resting intracellular Ca2+ concentration was more consistent compared to the cells in the apical-in organoids. Using this advanced model, we demonstrated the expression and function of two novel ion channels, the Ca2+ activated Cl channel Anoctamin 1 (ANO1) and the epithelial Na+ channel (ENaC), which were not considered in ductal cells yet. Finally, we showed that the available functional assays, such as forskolin-induced swelling, or intracellular Cl measurement have improved dynamic range when performed with apical-out organoids. Taken together our data suggest that polarity-switched human pancreatic ductal organoids are suitable models to expand our toolset in basic and translational research. Graphical abstract

Funder

Magyar Tudományos Akadémia

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

University of Szeged

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cell Biology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Pharmacology,Molecular Biology,Molecular Medicine

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