Infant and Adult Human Intestinal Enteroids are Morphologically and Functionally Distinct

Author:

Adeniyi-Ipadeola Grace O.ORCID,Hankins Julia D.ORCID,Kambal Amal,Zeng Xi-Lei,Patil KetkiORCID,Poplaski VictoriaORCID,Bomidi Carolyn,Nguyen-Phuc Hoa,Grimm Sandra L.,Coarfa Cristian,Crawford Sue E.,Blutt Sarah E.,Speer Allison L.,Estes Mary K.,Ramani Sasirekha

Abstract

AbstractBackground & AimsHuman intestinal enteroids (HIEs) are gaining recognition as physiologically relevant models of the intestinal epithelium. While HIEs from adults are used extensively in biomedical research, few studies have used HIEs from infants. Considering the dramatic developmental changes that occur during infancy, it is important to establish models that represent the infant intestinal anatomy and physiological responses.MethodsWe established jejunal HIEs from infant surgical samples and performed comparisons to jejunal HIEs from adults using RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) and morphologic analyses. We validated differences in key pathways through functional studies and determined if these cultures recapitulate known features of the infant intestinal epithelium.ResultsRNA-Seq analysis showed significant differences in the transcriptome of infant and adult HIEs, including differences in genes and pathways associated with cell differentiation and proliferation, tissue development, lipid metabolism, innate immunity, and biological adhesion. Validating these results, we observed as higher expression of enterocytes, goblet cells and enteroendocrine cells in differentiated infant HIEs, and greater numbers of proliferative cells in undifferentiated cultures. Compared to adult HIEs, infant HIEs portray characteristics of an immature gastrointestinal epithelium including significantly shorter cell height, lower epithelial barrier integrity, and lower innate immune responses to infection with an oral poliovirus vaccine.ConclusionsHIEs established from infant intestinal tissues reflect characteristics of the infant gut and are distinct from adult cultures. Our data support the use of infant HIEs as an ex-vivo model to advance studies of infant-specific diseases and drug discovery for this population.Graphical AbstractCreated with Biorender.com

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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