CULTEX : an alternative technique for cultivation and exposure of cells of the respiratory tract to airborne pollutants at the air/liquid interface

2000 
Summary The assessment of cytotoxicity of air contaminants such as gaseous or particulate compounds and complex mixtures has traditionally involved animal experiments, due to the difficulties in exposing cell cultures directly to these substances. New cultivation and exposure techniques enhance the efficiency of in vitro studies, as demonstrated by a new experimental system called CULTEX 1 which allows direct exposure of cells at the air/liquid interface. In this case, human bronchial epithelial cells are cultivated on porous transwell membranes in a device allowing intermittent medium supply. The medium is pumped into a special modular culture unit through the transwell membrane supporting the cells. At certain time intervals, the medium is completely removed and the cells can be maintained and exposed at the air/liquid interface until the next medium supply without loss of viability. In comparison to conventional submersed culture conditions, the cells have been grown on trans well membranes using the new pulse submersion technique. There are no deleterious effects on cell viability due to the direct exposure to airborne pollutants. Thus, the introduction of these new cultivation and exposure techniques offers new testing strategies for the toxicological evaluation of inhalable soluble and inert substances as well as complex mixtures.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    12
    References
    88
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []