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In Vitro Co-culture of Bacterial and Mammalian Cells to Investigate Effects of Potential Probiotics on Intestinal Barrier Function

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posted on 2025-07-03, 01:52 authored by Ajitpal Purba, Rachel AndersonRachel Anderson, Dulantha UlluwishewaDulantha Ulluwishewa

Human intestinal barrier function is crucial for health. Beneficial microbes, such as commensal gut bacteria and probiotics, are known to contribute to the regulation of this barrier function. Interactions between bacteria and human intestinal cells can be analyzed by co-culturing bacteria with mammalian cells in vitro. Here, we describe a method to assess the effect of individual bacterial strains on intestinal barrier function using automated transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) measurements. Caco-2 cells are used as a model of the intestinal epithelium, as these cells spontaneously differentiate into small intestinal epithelial-like cells characterized by tight junctions between adjacent cells. These cells are seeded on polyester filter inserts and cultured for 17 days to form a differentiated monolayer prior to the co-culture experiment. Bacteria are grown on agar, and a single colony is used to prepare a liquid culture in bacterial broth appropriate for the bacteria of interest. On the day of the co-culture experiment, the bacterial culture is resuspended in cell culture medium at the desired concentration. Inserts are transferred to cellZscope cell modules to enable automated TEER measurements, and the medium in the insert is replaced with cell culture medium containing the bacteria of interest. This method allows for intestinal tight junction barrier function to be assessed non-invasively and in real-time in response to probiotics. The use of the automated cellZscope system eliminates the need for labor-intensive manual TEER measurements, which reduces the variability in data that results from human handling and temperature changes that occur when cells are removed from the incubator.

History

Rights statement

© 2025 The Authors; exclusive licensee Bio-protocol LLC. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).

Publication date

2025-06-20

Project number

  • Non revenue

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

Bio-protocol LLC

Journal title

Bio-protocol

ISSN

2331-8325

Volume/issue number

15(12)

Page numbers

e5361

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