1.
Cigarette Smoke Extract Disturbs Mitochondria-Regulated Airway Epithelial Cell Responses to Pneumococci.
Aghapour, M, Tulen, CBM, Abdi Sarabi, M, Weinert, S, Müsken, M, Relja, B, van Schooten, FJ, Jeron, A, Braun-Dullaeus, R, Remels, AH, et al
Cells. 2022;11(11)
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Plain language summary
Cigarette smoking can affect airway epithelial cells, causing overproduction of mucus, damage, and inflammation, which may result in the progression of airway diseases. Airway epithelial cells (AEC) rely on mitochondria for energy, and mitochondrial dysfunction may affect innate immunity and the integrity of the airway epithelium. Cigarette smoking is found to accelerate mitochondrial damage within AEC. Maintaining a normal microbial composition within the respiratory tract is essential for maintaining immunity. There is evidence that smoking cigarettes disrupts the microbial composition and increases the spread of pathogenic bacteria such as Streptococcus pneumoniae (Sp) which causes inflammation. By exposing 16HBE cells to Sp and cigarette smoke extract (CSE), this study investigated the effect of cigarette smoking on mitochondrial dysfunction in ACE in an in vitro model. Additionally, the study examined the direct and indirect pathways involved in cigarette smoking-induced mitochondrial dysfunction and altered innate immune response to Sp infection. CSE exposure decreases mitochondrial complex protein levels and mitochondrial membrane potential, which affects energy production. It also increases mitochondrial oxidative stress and mitochondrial degradation. All these factors lead to mitochondrial dysfunction in ACE. CSE exposure to ACE was associated with altered gene expression in the tight and adherence junctions that serve as a protective barrier against pathogens and pollutants and reduced type I interferon immune responses to Sp. Using the results of this study, healthcare professionals can gain a better understanding of the impact of cigarette smoking on mitochondrial dysfunction and how it increases susceptibility to Sp-related immune responses. It is necessary to conduct further studies to evaluate the effects of cigarette smoking on mitochondrial dysfunction, microbial composition disruption, and the interaction between AECs and elevated immune responses.
Abstract
Mitochondrial functionality is crucial for the execution of physiologic functions of metabolically active cells in the respiratory tract including airway epithelial cells (AECs). Cigarette smoke is known to impair mitochondrial function in AECs. However, the potential contribution of mitochondrial dysfunction in AECs to airway infection and airway epithelial barrier dysfunction is unknown. In this study, we used an in vitro model based on AECs exposed to cigarette smoke extract (CSE) followed by an infection with Streptococcus pneumoniae (Sp). The levels of oxidative stress as an indicator of mitochondrial stress were quantified upon CSE and Sp treatment. In addition, expression of proteins associated with mitophagy, mitochondrial content, and biogenesis as well as mitochondrial fission and fusion was quantified. Transcriptional AEC profiling was performed to identify the potential changes in innate immune pathways and correlate them with indices of mitochondrial function. We observed that CSE exposure substantially altered mitochondrial function in AECs by suppressing mitochondrial complex protein levels, reducing mitochondrial membrane potential and increasing mitochondrial stress and mitophagy. Moreover, CSE-induced mitochondrial dysfunction correlated with reduced enrichment of genes involved in apical junctions and innate immune responses to Sp, particularly type I interferon responses. Together, our results demonstrated that CSE-induced mitochondrial dysfunction may contribute to impaired innate immune responses to Sp.
2.
Cell sheet technology: Influence of culture conditions on in vitro-cultivated corneal stromal tissue for regenerative therapies of the ocular surface.
Hasenzahl, M, Müsken, M, Mertsch, S, Schrader, S, Reichl, S
Journal of biomedical materials research. Part B, Applied biomaterials. 2021;(10):1488-1504
Abstract
The in vitro reconstruction of stromal tissue by long-term cultivation of corneal fibroblasts is a smart approach for regenerative therapies of ocular surface diseases. However, systematic investigations evaluating optimized cultivation protocols for the realization of a biomaterial are lacking. This study investigated the influence of supplements to the culture media of human corneal fibroblasts on the formation of a cell sheet consisting of cells and extracellular matrix. Among the supplements studied are vitamin C, fetal bovine serum, L-glutamine, components of collagen such as L-proline, L-4-hydroxyproline and glycine, and TGF-β1, bFGF, IGF-2, PDGF-BB and insulin. After long-term cultivation, the proliferation, collagen and glycosaminoglycan content and light transmission of the cell sheets were examined. Biomechanical properties were investigated by tensile tests and the ultrastructure was characterized by electron microscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering, antibody staining and ELISA. The synthesis of extracellular matrix was significantly increased by cultivation with insulin or TGF-β1, each with vitamin C. The sheets exhibited a high transparency and suitable material properties. The production of a transparent, scaffold-free, potentially autologous, in vitro-generated construct by culturing fibroblasts with extracellular matrix synthesis-stimulating supplements represents a promising approach for a biomaterial that can be used for ocular surface reconstruction in slowly progressing diseases.
3.
Inoculation density and nutrient level determine the formation of mushroom-shaped structures in Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms.
Ghanbari, A, Dehghany, J, Schwebs, T, Müsken, M, Häussler, S, Meyer-Hermann, M
Scientific reports. 2016;:32097
Abstract
Pseudomonas aeruginosa often colonises immunocompromised patients and the lungs of cystic fibrosis patients. It exhibits resistance to many antibiotics by forming biofilms, which makes it hard to eliminate. P. aeruginosa biofilms form mushroom-shaped structures under certain circumstances. Bacterial motility and the environment affect the eventual mushroom morphology. This study provides an agent-based model for the bacterial dynamics and interactions influencing bacterial biofilm shape. Cell motility in the model relies on recently published experimental data. Our simulations show colony formation by immotile cells. Motile cells escape from a single colony by nutrient chemotaxis and hence no mushroom shape develops. A high number density of non-motile colonies leads to migration of motile cells onto the top of the colonies and formation of mushroom-shaped structures. This model proposes that the formation of mushroom-shaped structures can be predicted by parameters at the time of bacteria inoculation. Depending on nutrient levels and the initial number density of stalks, mushroom-shaped structures only form in a restricted regime. This opens the possibility of early manipulation of spatial pattern formation in bacterial colonies, using environmental factors.