Open-source 3D printed manifolds for exposure studies using human airway epithelial cells

Author:

Singer RyanORCID,Ball Elizabeth,Milad Nadia,Nguyen Jenny P.,Cao Quynh,Selvaganapathy Ravi,Zhang Boyang,Dabaghi Mohammadhossein,Satia Imran,Hirota Jeremy A.

Abstract

AbstractRationaleInhalation of airborne stimuli can damage the airway epithelium, increasing the risk of developing respiratory or systemic diseases.In vitrostudies using air-liquid interface cell cultures enable controlled investigation of cellular responses to relevant exposures. Commercialin vitroexposure systems provide precise and reproducible dosage but require significant capital investment and are not amenable to customization. Research groups interested in respiratory exposure science may benefit from a more accessible alternative open-source exposure system. We present 3D printed manifolds for applying a range of airborne exposures uniformly across standard, commercially available 6- and 24-well plates with air-liquid interface culture inserts.MethodsA simple chamber-style exposure system and the manifolds were evaluated for exposure uniformity via computational fluid dynamics simulations and deposition of nebulized FITC-labelled dextran. The chamber and manifolds were manufactured using a stereolithography 3D printer. Cannabis concentrate vapor was generated from 3 different vaporizers and applied to well plates using the manifold system. Calu-3 cells were cultured on Transwell™ inserts and exposed to whole tobacco smoke or room air.ResultsThe manifolds produced less variation in simulated air velocities and physical deposition of FITC-dextran aerosol deposition across well plates compared to those of the chamber-style exposure system. Distinct doses of cannabis concentrate vapour were delivered to well plates with low variation among wells. Whole tobacco smoke exposure using the manifold system induced functional changes in Calu-3 airway epithelial cell barrier function, cytokine production (IL-6 and IL-8), and cell membrane potential.ConclusionsCollectively, our data demonstrate the feasibility and the validity of our open-source 3D printed manifolds for use in studying various respiratory exposures and position our designs as more accessible options in parallel with commercially available systems.All article content is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY-NC 4.0) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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