0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Gut & Microbiome Human Health Effects Policy & Risk Remediation Sign in to save

Capturing and Quantifying Particle Transcytosis with Microphysiological Intestine‐on‐Chip Models

Small Methods 2022 15 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ludivine Delon, Matthew Faria, Zhengyang Jia, Zhengyang Jia, Stuart T. Johnston, Rachel Gibson, Clive A. Prestidge, Benjamin Thierry

Summary

A microphysiological intestinal model was used to quantify how nano- and microparticles cross the gut epithelium by transcytosis, providing more realistic transport data than standard Caco-2 monolayer assays. The system revealed size-dependent transport efficiency with implications for both drug delivery optimization and health risk assessment of ingested particles.

Study Type In vitro

Understanding the intestinal transport of particles is critical in several fields ranging from optimizing drug delivery systems to capturing health risks from the increased presence of nano- and micro-sized particles in human environment. While Caco-2 cell monolayers grown on permeable supports are the traditional in vitro model used to probe intestinal absorption of dissolved molecules, they fail to recapitulate the transcytotic activity of polarized enterocytes. Here, an intestine-on-chip model is combined with in silico modeling to demonstrate that the rate of particle transcytosis is ≈350× higher across Caco-2 cell monolayers exposed to fluid shear stress compared to Caco-2 cells in standard "static" configuration. This relates to profound phenotypical alterations and highly polarized state of cells grown under mechanical stimulation and it is shown that transcytosis in the microphysiological model is energy-dependent and involves both clathrin and macropinocytosis mediated endocytic pathways. Finally, it is demonstrated that the increased rate of transcytosis through cells exposed to flow is explained by a higher rate of internal particle transport (i.e., vesicular cellular trafficking and basolateral exocytosis), rather than a change in apical uptake (i.e., binding and endocytosis). Taken together, the findings have important implications for addressing research questions concerning intestinal transport of engineered and environmental particles.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper