Yonsei Med J. 2000 Dec;41(6):803-813. English.
Published online Apr 07, 2009.
Copyright © 2000 The Yonsei University College of Medicine
Review

Temperature-Responsive surface for novel co-culture systems of hepatocytes with endothelial cells: 2-D patterned and double layered co-cultures

Motohiro Hirose, Masayuki Yamato, Oh Hyeong Kwon, Masami Harimoto, Ai Kushida, Tatsuya Shimizu, Akihiko Kikuchi and Teruo Okano
    • Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Tokyo Women's Medical University, Japan.
Received November 17, 2000.

Abstract

We have developed two novel cell co-culture system, without any on cell type combination limitation, utilizing a polymer surface which is temperature-sensitive with respect to its cell adhesion characteristics. One system involves a patterned co-culture of primary hepatocytes with endothelial cells utilizing patterned masked of the electron-beam cured, temperature-responsive polymer, poly (N-isopropylacrylamide) (PIPAAm) by masked electron beam irradiation. Hepatocytes were cultured to confluency at 37℃ on these surfaces. When the culture temperature was reduced below 32℃, cells detached from the PIPAAm-grafted areas without any need for trypsin. Endothelial cells were then seeded onto the same surfaces at 37℃. These subsequently seeded endothelial cells adhered only to the now-exposed PIPAAm-grafted domains and could be co-cultured with the hepatocytes initially seeded at 37℃ in well-ordered patterns. The other system involves a double layered co-culture obtained by overlaying endothelial cell sheets of the designed shape onto hepatocyte monolayers. The endothelial cells adhered and proliferated on the PIPAAm-grafted surface, as on polystyrene tissue culture dishes at 37℃. By reducing the temperature, confluent monolayers of cells detached from the PIPAAm surfaces without trypsin. Because the recovered cells maintaed intact cell-cell junctions together with deposited extracellular matrix, the harvested endothelial cell sheets, with designed shapes, were transferable and readily adhered to hepatocyte monolayers. Stable double layered cell sheets could be co-cultivated. These two co-culture methods enabled long-term co-culture of primary hepatocytes with endothelial cells. Hepatocytes so co-cultured with endothelial cells maintained their differentiated functions, such as albumin synthesis for unexpectedly long periods. These novel two co-culture systems offer promising techniques for basic biologic researches upon intercellular communications, and for the clinical applications of tissue engineered constructs.

Keywords
Poly (N-isopropylacrylamide); temperature-responsive surface; cell sheet manipulation; hepatocyte; co-culture; tissue engineering


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