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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Human Upcyte Hepatocytes: Characterization of the Hepatic Phenotype and Evaluation for Acute and Long-Term Hepatotoxicity Routine Testing
Laia TolosaSilvia LópezM. José Gómez-lechónCarla GuzmánM. Teresa DonatoRamiro JoverJosé V. Castellsubject
0301 basic medicineTime FactorsPrimary Cell CultureTransfectionToxicologyRisk AssessmentTranscriptome03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMetabolomicsCytochrome P-450 Enzyme SystemIn vivoToxicity TestsmedicineHumansChildGlycogen synthaseDose-Response Relationship DrugbiologyInfant NewbornCytochrome P450Hep G2 CellsMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePhenotypeHigh-Throughput Screening AssaysIsoenzymesOxidative StressPhenotype030104 developmental biologyGene Expression RegulationLiver030220 oncology & carcinogenesisHepatocytesbiology.proteinHepatic stellate cellCancer researchChemical and Drug Induced Liver InjurySteatosisTranscriptomedescription
The capacity of human hepatic cell-based models to predict hepatotoxicity depends on the functional performance of cells. The major limitations of human hepatocytes include the scarce availability and rapid loss of the hepatic phenotype. Hepatoma cells are readily available and easy to handle, but are metabolically poor compared with hepatocytes. Recently developed human upcyte hepatocytes offer the advantage of combining many features of primary hepatocytes with the unlimited availability of hepatoma cells. We analyzed the phenotype of upcyte hepatocytes comparatively with HepG2 cells and adult primary human hepatocytes to characterize their functional features as a differentiated hepatic cell model. The transcriptomic analysis of liver characteristic genes confirmed that the upcyte hepatocytes expression profile comes closer to human hepatocytes than HepG2 cells. CYP activities were measurable and showed a similar response to prototypical CYP inducers than primary human hepatocytes. Upcyte hepatocytes also retained conjugating activities and key hepatic functions, e.g. albumin, urea, lipid and glycogen synthesis, at levels close to hepatocytes. We also investigated the suitability of this cell model for preclinical hepatotoxicity risk assessments using multiparametric high-content screening, as well as transcriptomics and targeted metabolomic analysis. Compounds with well-documented in vivo hepatotoxicity were screened after acute and repeated doses up to 1 week. The evaluation of complex mechanisms of cell toxicity, drug-induced steatosis and oxidative stress biomarkers demonstrated that, by combining the phenotype of primary human hepatocytes and the ease of handling of HepG2 cells, upcyte hepatocytes offer suitable properties to be potentially used for toxicological assessments during drug development.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-05-22 | Toxicological Sciences |