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W tym Artykule

  • Podsumowanie
  • Streszczenie
  • Wprowadzenie
  • Protokół
  • Wyniki
  • Dyskusje
  • Ujawnienia
  • Podziękowania
  • Materiały
  • Odniesienia
  • Przedruki i uprawnienia

Podsumowanie

Using three-dimensional organotypic cultures to visualize morphology and functional markers of salivary glands may provide novel insights into the mechanisms of tissue damage following radiation. Described here is a protocol to section, culture, irradiate, stain, and image 50–90 μm thick salivary gland sections prior to and following exposure to ionizing radiation.

Streszczenie

Hyposalivation and xerostomia create chronic oral complications that decrease the quality of life in head and neck cancer patients who are treated with radiotherapy. Experimental approaches to understanding mechanisms of salivary gland dysfunction and restoration have focused on in vivo models, which are handicapped by an inability to systematically screen therapeutic candidates and efficiencies in transfection capability to manipulate specific genes. The purpose of this salivary gland organotypic culture protocol is to evaluate maximal time of culture viability and characterize cellular changes following ex vivo radiation treatment. We utilized immunofluorescent staining and confocal microscopy to determine when specific cell populations and markers are present during a 30-day culture period. In addition, cellular markers previously reported in in vivo radiation models are evaluated in cultures that are irradiated ex vivo. Moving forward, this method is an attractive platform for rapid ex vivo assessment of murine and human salivary gland tissue responses to therapeutic agents that improve salivary function.

Wprowadzenie

Proper salivary gland function is essential to oral health and is altered following head and neck cancer treatment with radiotherapy1. In 2017, nearly 50,000 new cases of head and neck cancer were reported in the United States2. Due to the tissue-damaging and frequently irreversible effects of radiation therapy on surrounding normal tissues such as salivary glands, patients are often left with severe side effects and diminished quality of life2,3,4. Common complications caused by radiation damage manifests in symptoms such as xerostomia (the subjective feeling of dry mouth), dental caries, impaired ability to chew and swallow, speech impairments, and compromised oral microbiomes2,3,4. These symptoms collectively can lead to malnutrition and impaired survival in affected individuals5. While salivary gland dysfunction in this population has been well-documented, the underlying mechanisms of damage to acinar cells have been disputed, and there is little integration among different animal models6,7.

The current methods of studying salivary gland function and radiation-induced damage include the use of in vivo models, immortalized cell lines, two-dimensional (2-D) primary cell cultures, and three-dimensional (3-D) salisphere cultures8,9,10,11,12. Traditionally, cell culture models from immortalized cell lines and 2-D cultures involve single layered cells cultured on flat surfaces and are valuable for fast, easy, and cost-effective experimentation. However, artificial cell culture conditions can alter the differentiation status and physiological responses of cells exposed to various conditions, and the results often fail to translate to whole organism models14,15. In addition, immortalized cell cultures require modulation of p53 activity, which is critical for the salivary gland response to DNA damage16,17.

3-D salisphere cultures are enriched for stem and progenitor cells at early time points in culture and have been useful for understanding the radiosensitivity of this subset of salivary gland cells9,18. A critical limitation of all these culture models is they are ineffective in visualizing the 3-D structure of the salivary gland, including the extracellular matrix (ECM) and cell-cell interactions over various layers, which are crucial in modulating salivary secretion15. The need for a method that encompasses the behavior of the tissue as a whole but can also be manipulated under laboratory conditions to study the effects of treatment is necessary to further discover the underlying mechanisms of radiation-induced salivary gland dysfunction.

Live tissue sectioning and culture has been documented previously19,20 and is often used to study brain-tissue interactions21. In previous studies, parotid (PAR) salivary gland tissue from mice was sectioned at approximately 50 µm and cultured for up to 48 h, and analysis of viability, cell death, and function was performed thereafter19. Su et al. (2016) expanded on this methodology by culturing human submandibular glands (SMGs) sectioned at 35 µm or 50 µm for 14 days20. The proposed method is an advancement in that it includes both parotid and submandibular salivary glands sectioned at 50 µm and 90 µm and evaluation of the cultures for 30 days. The ability to cut a range of tissue thickness is important in evaluating cell-cell and cell-ECM interactions that are relevant for cellular processes including apical-basolateral polarity and innervation for secretion. Furthermore, the salivary gland slices were irradiated while in culture to determine the feasibility of this culture model to study radiation-induced salivary gland damage.

The purpose of this salivary gland organotypic culture protocol is to evaluate maximal time of culture viability and characterize cellular changes following ex vivo radiation treatment. To determine the maximum time sections that are viable post-dissection, trypan blue staining, live cell staining, and immunohistochemical staining for cell death were performed. Confocal microscopy and immunofluorescent staining were utilized to evaluate specific cell populations, morphological structures, and levels of proliferation. Tissue section cultures were also exposed to ionizing radiation to determine the effects of radiation on various markers in this 3-D model. Induction of cell death, cytoskeletal disruption, loss of differentiation markers, and compensatory proliferation in irradiated ex vivo cultures were compared to previous studies of in vivo models. This methodology provides a means to investigate the role of cell-cell interactions following radiation damage and provides an experimental model to efficiently evaluate the efficacy of therapeutic interventions (gene manipulations or pharmacological agents) that may be less suitable for in vivo models.

Protokół

1. Preparation of vibratome

  1. Spray detachable components of the vibratome including the buffer tray, blade attachment, agarose block mold, and laboratory film with 70% ethanol, then UV-sterilize for at least 30 min.
  2. Place and secure an additional sheet of laboratory film over the buffer tray to prevent ice from falling in.
  3. Fill the ice chamber with crushed ice, remove the laboratory film from the buffer tray, and fill the buffer tray with 100 mL of ice-cold 1x phosphate buffered saline (PBS) solution supplemented with 1% penicillin-streptomycin-ampicillin (PSA).
  4. Place a stainless steel razor blade into the blade holder. Use the screwdriver to tighten/loosen and change the angle of the blade.

2. Preparation of tissue sample in agarose block and sectioning using the vibratome

  1. Autoclave all necessary dissection and sectioning tools including forceps, scissors, and paintbrushes.
  2. Prepare 3% low melting point agarose in sterile 1x PBS and microwave until the agarose dissolves into solution. Ensure that the solution does not boil over and swirl the bottle periodically to mix.
    NOTE: Prevent the low-melting agarose from solidifying by keeping it in a warm water bath. The low-melt agarose is fluid at 37 °C and sets at 25 °C. However, the water bath should be below 40 °C in order to pour the agarose around the tissue at physiological temperature.
  3. Isolate salivary glands and place dissected tissue into 2 mL ice-cold 1x PBS supplemented with 1% PSA in a sterile, 30 mm culture dish.
  4. Using autoclaved forceps, remove salivary glands from 1x PBS + 1% PSA solution and position at the bottom of an embedding mold. Fill the mold with liquid 3% low melting point agarose to cover the tissue.
  5. Using the forceps, adjust the tissue to the middle of the block and position the salivary gland in the appropriate plane. The best cross sections for the submandibular and parotid glands are in the vertical plane.
  6. Place agarose block on ice for 10 min to harden.
  7. Carefully run a razor blade around the outer edge of the agarose to loosen and let the block slide out onto the UV-sterilized laboratory film from step 1.1.
  8. Use a razor blade to cut out an agarose box containing the salivary gland. Ensure that the plane of section is straight and parallel to the opposite side of the block (the surface that will be glued down). Since the agarose does not infiltrate the tissue, do not trim off too much agarose around the tissue so the tissue will be well supported.
  9. Use superglue to attach the block to the cutting surface.
  10. Section at 50 µm or 90 µm thickness by vibratome at a speed of 0.075 mm/s and frequency of 100 Hz.
    NOTE: Setting the vibratome at the highest frequency and lowest blade speed provides the most optimal slices.
  11. Collect sections in a 24-well tissue culture dish containing ~1 mL ice-cold PBS per well using an autoclaved, natural hair paintbrush, placing the brush in 70% ethanol between slice collections to maintain sterility.

3. Culturing sections

  1. Autoclave a micro-spatula and forceps.
  2. Make stock vibratome culture media with or without fetal bovine serum (FBS): DMEM/F12 media supplemented with 1% PSA, 5 µg/mL transferrin, 1.1 µM hydrocortisone, 0.1 µM retinoic acid, 5 µg/mL insulin, 80 ng/mL epidermal growth factor, 5 mM L-glutamine, 50 µg/mL gentamicin sulfate, and 10 µL/mL trace element mixture. Add an appropriate amount of FBS to make 0%, 2.5%, 5.0%, or 10% solutions.
  3. Prior to sectioning, add 300 μL of pre-warmed media and place a 12 mm diameter, 0.4 µm pore-size membrane insert into each well of a 24-well tissue culture plate. The media should reach the membrane bottom to create a liquid-air interface for culture.
  4. Gently lay the salivary sections on top of the membrane insert using the micro spatula and culture at 37 °C in humidified 5% CO2 and 95% air atmosphere incubator.
    1. Add approximately 300 μL primary culture media into the well and a few drops into the membrane inserts (approximately 40 μL) every other day or as needed. Proper culturing showed that the cells are able to survive and be maintained for up to 30 days ex vivo.

4. Irradiation of salivary gland sections

  1. Treat sections with a single dose of radiation (5 Gy) using cobalt-60 (or equivalent) irradiator.
    1. Transport sections to irradiator facility using a covered styrofoam container to avoid fluctuations in temperature. In addition, care needs to be taken during transport back to the laboratory incubator to ensure that media does not splash onto culture lid and induce contamination.
    2. Place the 24-well plate containing salivary gland sections 80 cm from the radiation source, in the center of a 32” x 32” radiation field. Radiation dose calculations and corresponding time in irradiator will vary by instrument and cobalt-60 decay.
  2. Continue monitoring and culturing these sections as described in section 3.

5. Viability staining

  1. Aspirate old media and wash slices twice with sterile, pre-warmed 1x PBS.
  2. Stain sections with trypan blue dye.
    1. Use a micro-spatula to move the slice from the culture to a glass slide.
    2. Add 0.4% trypan blue solution to the vibratome slice with enough volume to cover the tissue (10–20 µL).
    3. Incubate slices at room temperature (RT) in the trypan blue for 1–2 min for the dye to penetrate the tissue. Nonviable cells will be stained blue, and viable cells will be unstained.
  3. Stain sections with calcein, AM live-cell dye.
    1. Add enough volume of stain to cover the section in one well of a 24 well-plate (200–300 µL).
    2. Incubate slices at RT for 15 min to allow dye penetration.
    3. Carefully remove the section from the well and place on a glass slide. Mount slices with 1 drop of mounting media.
    4. Image sections on a fluorescent microscope at excitation/emission wavelengths of 488 nm and 515 nm.

6. Antibody staining vibratome sections

NOTE: The following provides a general antibody staining protocol specific for Ki-67; however, this protocol can be used with any antibody. All washes are conducted at RT unless otherwise noted.

  1. In the multi-well tissue culture dish, aspirate off media and wash at least 2x with sterile 1x PBS.
  2. Fix sections using 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) overnight at 4 °C.
  3. Aspirate off 4% PFA and wash 3x with PBT [1x PBS, 1% bovine serum albumin (BSA), 0.1% Triton X-100].
    NOTE: Sections can be stored in 1x PBS at 4 °C and stained at a later time. Maximum storage time tested in this manuscript was 3 weeks. Longer storage time will need to be optimized by the individual user if that is desired.
  4. Permeabilize sections using 0.3% Triton X-100 in 1x PBS for 30 min.
    NOTE: This step can be modified and optimized for specific antibody staining and permeabilization.
  5. Pipet off permeabilization solution.
  6. Wash slices 3x for 5 min with 1x PBS, 1% BSA, and 0.1% Triton X-100 (PBT).
  7. Block the slices with blocking agent with 1% normal goat serum for 1 h.
  8. Wash the slices 3x for 5 min with PBT.
  9. Incubate the slices overnight at 4 °C with 500 µL anti-Ki67 rabbit monoclonal antibody diluted in 1% BSA in 1x PBS.
    NOTE: For phalloidin staining, skip step 6.9 and proceed using the protocol for the specific phalloidin used. For DNA counterstain, skip to step 6.15.
  10. Aspirate anti-Ki67 rabbit monoclonal antibody.
  11. Wash the slices 6x for 5 min in 1x PBS.
  12. Incubate the slices in 500 µL of fluorescently conjugated secondary antibody compatible with the anti-Ki67 antibody diluted in 1% BSA in 1x PBS at RT for 1.5 h covered from light.
    NOTE: Based on secondary antibody used, incubation time with the secondary antibody can be further optimized by the individual user. In addition, the secondary antibody is light-sensitive. All subsequent washes must be performed in the dark.
  13. Aspirate secondary antibody.
  14. Wash slices for 3x for 5 min with 1x PBS.
  15. Wash slices for 5 min in deionized water.
  16. Counterstain slices with DAPI (1µg/mL) for 20 min at RT.
  17. Wash slices (once) for 5 min in deionized water.
  18. Mount slices with one drop (~40 µL) of mounting media. To avoid excess bubbles, slowly place the coverslip onto the mounting media on the slide, starting with a 45° angle.
    1. To prevent crushing the thick sections with the coverslip, mount each slice with a spacer. A spacer can be created by placing a rim of vacuum grease in a square around the tissue section.
    2. When laying the coverslip, the edges of the coverslip can be sealed with vacuum grease. Press down on the edges of the coverslip with your thumb to firmly adhere it onto the slide. Alternatively, seal the coverslip onto the microscope slide using clear nail polish.

7. Imaging vibratome sections

  1. Image the stained slides within 5 days of staining.
  2. Obtain optical sections of the stained vibratome slices using a confocal microscope. With a confocal microscope, obtain a z-stack at a defined step size or take individual images depending on the user’s experimental design. Images can be examined on any computer screen after confocal collection.
    NOTE: Due to the thickness of the vibratome slices, it is recommended that a confocal microscope or a scope with z-stack capability is used to visualize details within the samples. For the images used in this manuscript, a 63x oil objective was used; however, this can be tailored and further modified by the individual user and the specific scope used. Recommended pixel resolution for each objective and zoom factor with the assumed Nyquist sampling of 2.5 pixels in X and Y for the smallest optically resolvable structure was used. However, some commentators suggest 2.3 pixels, while others suggest 2.8 pixels. Please refer to the Handbook of Biological Confocal Microscopy22 for further details on how to make these calculations.

Wyniki

Primary 2-D cultures are grown in fetal bovine serum (FBS) supplemented media while primary 3-D salisphere culture are typically cultured in serum-free conditions10,11. In addition, the two previous studies utilizing vibratome cultures from salivary glands cultured their sections in 0% or 10% FBS supplemented media19,20. Mouse submandibular slices were sectioned at a thick...

Dyskusje

Salivary gland research has utilized a number of culture models, including immortalized 2-D cultures, primary 2-D cultures, 3-D salisphere cultures, and 3-D organ cultures from embryonic explants to ascertain questions on underlying biology and physiology. These culture models have yielded insightful information across a diverse array of research questions and will continue to be important tools in salivary research. The limitations of these culture models include modulation of p53 activity during immortalization, transi...

Ujawnienia

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Podziękowania

This work was supported in part by pilot funding provided by University of Arizona Office of Research and Discovery and National Institutes of Health (R01 DE023534) to Kirsten Limesand. The Cancer Biology Training Grant, T32CA009213, provided stipend support for Wen Yu Wong. The authors would like to thank M. Rice for his valuable technical contribution.

Materiały

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
Vibratome VT1000SLeica BiosystemsN/AVibratome for sectioning
Double Edge Stainless Steel Razor BladesElectron Microscopy Sciences72000
AgaroseFisher ScientificBP165-25Low-melt
ParafilmSigma-AldrichP6543
Penicillin-Streptomycin-Amphotericin BLonza17-745HPSA
24-well plateCellTreat229124
Dulbecco’s Phosphate Buffered Saline (DPBS)Gibco14190-144
Loctite UltraGel Control SuperglueLoctiteN/APurchased at hardware store
Natural Red Sable Round PaintbrushPrinceton Art & Brush Co7400R-2
Gentamicin SulfateFisher ScientificICN1676045
TransferrinSigma-AldrichT-8158-100mg
L-glutatmineGibco25030-081
Trace ElementsMP BiomedicalsICN1676549
InsulinFisher Scientific12585014
Epidermal Growth FactorCorning354001
HydrocortisoneSigma-AldrichH0888
Retinoic acidFisher ScientificR2625-50MG
Fetal Bovine SerumGibcoA3160602
DMEM/F12 MediaCorning150-90-CV
Millicell Cell Culture InsertMillipore SigmaPICM0125012 mm, 0.4 um pore size for 24 well plate
0.4% Trypan BlueSigma-AldrichT8154
LIVE/DEAD Cell Imaging Kit (488/570)Thermo-FisherR37601Only used LIVE dye component
Anti-Ki-67 AntibodyCell Signaling Technology9129S
Anti-E-cadherin AntibodyCell Signaling Technology3195S
Anti-Cleaved Caspase-3 AntibodyCell Signaling Technology9661L
Anti-SMA AntibodySigma-AldrichC6198
Anti-amylase AntibodySigma-AldrichA8273
Anti-CD31 AntibodyAbcamab28364
Anti-TUBB3 AntibodyCell Signaling Technology5568S
Alexa Fluor 594 Antibody Labeling KitThermo-FisherA20185
Alexa Fluor 594 PhalloidinThermo-FisherA12381
Bovine Serum AlbuminFisher ScientificBP1600
Triton X-100Sigma-Aldrich21568-2500
Paraformaldehyde PrillsFisher Scientific5027632
New England Nuclear Blocking AgentPerkin Elmer2346249No longer sold
DAPICell Signaling Technology4083S
Prolong Gold Antifade Mounting MediaInvitrogenP36934
Leica SPSII Spectral ConfocalLeica BiosystemsN/AFor confocal imaging
Leica DMIL Inverted Phase Contrast MicroscopeLeica BiosystemsN/A
Cobalt-60 Teletherapy InstrumentAtomic Energy of Canada Ltd Theratron-80N/A
Amac Box, ClearThe Container Store60140Agarose block mold

Odniesienia

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