학술논문

A biologically validated mathematical model for decoding epithelial apical, basolateral, and paracellular electrical properties.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Physiology: Cell Physiology. Dec2023, Vol. 325 Issue 6, pC1470-C1484. 15p.
Subject
*MACULAR degeneration
*EPITHELIUM
*MATHEMATICAL models
*CYTOLOGY
*RHODOPSIN
*AMYGDALOID body
Language
ISSN
0363-6143
Abstract
Epithelial tissues form selective barriers to ions, nutrients, waste products, and infectious agents throughout the body. Damage to these barriers is associated with conditions such as celiac disease, cystic fibrosis, diabetes, and age-related macular degeneration. Conventional electrophysiology measurements like transepithelial resistance can quantify epithelial tissue maturity and barrier integrity but are limited in differentiating between apical, basolateral, and paracellular transport pathways. To overcome this limitation, a combination of mathematical modeling, stem cell biology, and cell physiology led to the development of 3 P-EIS, a novel mathematical model and measurement technique. 3 P-EIS employs an intracellular pipette and extracellular electrochemical impedance spectroscopy to accurately measure membrane-specific properties of epithelia, without the constraints of prior models. 3 P-EIS was validated using electronic circuit models of epithelia with known resistances and capacitances, confirming a median error of 19% (interquartile range: 14%-26%) for paracellular and transcellular resistances and capacitances (n = 5). Patient stem cell-derived retinal pigment epithelium tissues were measured using 3 P-EIS, successfully isolating the cellular responses to adenosine triphosphate. 3 P-EIS enhances quality control in epithelial cell therapies and has extensive applicability in drug testing and disease modeling, marking a significant advance in epithelial physiology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]