Comparison of Rat Hepatocyte 2D-Monocultures and Hepatocytes Non-Parenchymal Cell Co-Cultures for Assessing Chemical Toxicity

Author:

Stefanowicz Amy J1,Recio Leslie1ORCID,Black Michael B1,Beames Tyler1,Andersen Melvin E1,Stern R Allysa1,Clewell Rebecca A12,McMullen Patrick D1,Hartman Jessica K1,Ranade Aarati1

Affiliation:

1. ScitoVation, Durham, NC, USA

2. 21st Century Tox Consulting, Chapel Hill, NC, USA

Abstract

Liver responses are the most common endpoints used as the basis for setting exposure standards. Liver hepatocytes play a vital role in biotransformation of xenobiotics, but non-parenchymal cells (NPCs) in the liver are also involved in certain liver responses. Development of in vitro systems that more faithfully capture liver responses to reduce reliance on animals is a major focus of New Approach Methodology (NAMs). Since rodent regulatory studies are frequently the sole source safety assessment data, mode-of-action data, and used for risk assessments, in vitro rodent models that reflect in vivo responses need to be developed to reduce reliance on animal models. In the work presented in this paper, we developed a 2-D hepatocyte monoculture and 2-D liver cell co-culture system using rat liver cells. These models were assessed for conditions for short-term stability of the cultures and phenotypic and transcriptomic responses of 2 prototypic hepatotoxicants compounds – acetaminophen and phenobarbital. The optimized multi-cellular 2-D culture required use of freshly prepared hepatocytes and NPCs from a single rat, a 3:1 ratio of hepatocytes to NPCs and growth medium using 50% Complete Williams E medium (WEM) and 50% Endothelial Cell Medium (ECM). The transcriptomic responses of the 2 model systems to PB were compared to previous studies from TG-Gates on the gene expression changes in intact rats and the co-culture model responses were more representative of the in vivo responses. Transcriptomic read-outs promise to move beyond conventional phenotypic evaluations with these in vitro NAMs and provide insights about modes of action.

Funder

Dow Chemical Company

American Chemistry Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Toxicology

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