Cells/colony motion index of oral keratinocytes predicts epithelial regenerative capacity
The cells/colony motion index determined by non-invasive, quantitative measurements via optical flow algorithm is correlated with epithelial regenerative capacity of oral keratinocytes in mid-phase cultures, making it a reliable tool for quality control
2021-06-06
(Press-News.org) Niigata, Japan - A comprehensive investigation on cells and colony motion offers new insight into the proliferative and epithelial regenerative capacities of human primary oral keratinocyte cultures with implications for quality control of engineered cells used in regenerative medicine. Dr. Kenji Izumi and his colleagues, Dr. Emi Hoshikawa and Dr. Taisuke Sato, modified the optical flow (OF) protocol originally presented in their 2019 paper to add the capacity to determine the threshold of the cells/colony motion speed required to differentiate substandard oral keratinocyte populations before manufacturing a tissue-engineered oral mucosa tissue construct. Interdisciplinary collaboration was critical to the success of this study, with Dr. Izumi and Dr. Hoshikawa, both experts in the fields of oral keratinocyte biology, relying on the image analysis and mathematics expertise provided by Dr. Sato to enhance the protocol proceeding OF algorithm implementation. Oral mucosa keratinocytes are currently employed in regenerative dentistry and extra-oral regenerative medicine and distinguishing cellular health is critical for manufacturing high-quality products used in cell-based therapies. While previous studies have non-invasively characterized the optimal metabolic activities of oral mucosa tissue-engineered grafts, the non-invasive measurements for first passaged (p1) oral keratinocytes have not developed yet as a tool for quality control of cells. The researchers first determined the specific spatio-temporal growth pattern of p1 cells, allowing them to set correlative estimates that reduced the time of microphotography from 24 hours to 4 hours, resulting in fewer image analyses. Cells/colony proliferation and motion speed of each frame was then assessed by applying the OF algorithm with image segmentation. As noted by Dr. Izumi "dynamic image-based analysis, rather than static image analysis such as observation of colony shape, allowed us to focus on cells/colony motion of oral keratinocytes in our cell culture system in which cells do not form densely-packed colonies". Using this approach, the mean motion speed (MMS), a marker of locomotive ability, was evaluated. As expected, this analysis validated their prior finding that the MMS of oral keratinocytes is positively correlated with proliferative capacity. Surprisingly, the team found this was not the only cellular characteristic associated with MMS, as histologic evaluation of cells showed epithelial regenerative potential is correlated with motion speed. The ability to assess both the proliferative capacity and epithelial regenerative capacity of mid-phase oral keratinocytes using the MMS threshold make this a more robust and predictive quality screening tool to ensure that the cells are suitable for clinical application.
Taking their investigation one step further, the researchers compared the growth characteristics of p1 oral keratinocytes exposed to metabolic challenge with those under standard conditions: "The creative point in this study was that we coerced cells in culture under a couple of poor conditions, which we called "challenged" protocols, to debilitate cells," said Dr. Izumi. "Then, we extrapolated the "threshold" in our own culture condition." The proliferative potential of cells grown in differing conditions was compared, and the population doubling times was calculated to determine the MMS threshold indicative of cells suitable for transfer to 3D culture conditions. In their specific culture system, a motion index less than 40 μm/h reflected cellular damages induced by metabolic challenges and subpar cell colonies. However, these results have a wider application, with the motion index functioning as a threshold to determine the quality of cultured cells in different culture conditions, as observed by Dr. Izumi: "Depending on different type of cells, the details of the algorithm need to be considered and adjusted. More importantly, the "threshold" is necessary to be determined by different type of cells, culture media, and culture conditions." Given that the motion index is correlated with characteristics intimately connected to cell quality and clinical use, such as proliferation and epithelial regeneration, it can function as a reliable indicator of quality control. "Since the non-invasive and quantitative monitoring of cells allows multiple observations over time, it is useful for quality control of cells in regenerative medicine and contributes to cell-manufacturing industry." However, Dr. Izumi notes it has applications beyond even regenerative medicine, such as cancer research. Ultimately, the team hopes to increase the accuracy of the motion speed measurement in the future and elucidate the molecular relationship underlying the correlation between locomotion and proliferation of oral keratinocytes, which contributes to determining critical quality attributes of oral keratinocytes.
INFORMATION:
References:
https://doi.org/10.1177/2041731419881528
[Attachments] See images for this press release:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2021-06-06
The world is one step closer to ultimately secure conference calls, thanks to a collaboration between Quantum Communications Hub researchers and their German colleagues, enabling a quantum-secure conversation to take place between four parties simultaneously.
The demonstration, led by Hub researchers based at Heriot-Watt University and published in Science Advances, is a timely advance, given the global reliance on remote collaborative working, including conference calls, since the start of the C19 pandemic.
There have been reports of significant escalation of cyber-attacks on popular teleconferencing platforms in the last year. This advance in quantum secured communications could lead to conference calls with inherent unhackable security measures, underpinned by the principles of ...
2021-06-05
In the Kumano Sea, off the southeast coast of Japan, an evolutionary mystery lay in wait. Researchers collected samples from the muddy sea floor, including hermit crabs, mollusks and discarded shells. Here, in and on these shells, they found scale worms living mostly in pairs with a striking difference compared to the almost 900 already known species of scale worms: one was a quarter the size of its mate.
The discovery was published on March 29 as the cover of the Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research.
"The species is characterized by males being dwarf, with their minute bodies always riding on the dorsal side of females," said paper author Naoto Jimi, postdoctoral researcher at the National Institute of Polar Research, Research ...
2021-06-05
(Geneva, 5 June 2021) Mass screening of school age children has led to significantly higher numbers of coeliac disease cases being diagnosed, according to a new study presented today at the 6th World Congress of Paediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition.
Researchers in Italy found double the number of cases of the autoimmune disease - where the body produces antibodies to gluten, a protein found in wheat, barley, and rye - in school children compared to a similar study by the same group 25 years ago.
A new screening programme of 7,760 children aged from five ...
2021-06-05
(Geneva, 5 June 2021) Procedures to prevent the direct transmission of hepatitis B virus (HBV) from mother to child, particularly during and after pregnancy, have significant fragmentation and gaps, a new survey presented at the 6th World Congress of Paediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition has shown.
The results, based on 76 delivery hospitals from ten major European countries*, identified significant variances in maternal HBV screening frequency during pregnancy: 53% in the first trimester, 1% in the second trimester and 46% in the third trimester. Alarmingly, only 38% of those women who tested positive with high HBV-DNA levels were treated ...
2021-06-04
MADISON, Wis. -- If you're wearing gold jewelry right now, there's a good chance it came from an illegal mining operation in the tropics and surfaced only after some rainforest was sacrificed, according to a team of University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers and alumni who studied regulatory efforts to curb some of these environmentally damaging activities in the Amazon.
The researchers, including UW-Madison geography Professor Lisa Naughton, investigated mining-related deforestation in a biodiverse and ecologically sensitive area of the Peruvian Amazon to see whether formalizing and legalizing these mining operations might curb some of their negative effects.
Their study, published June 2 in the journal Environmental Research Letters, was co-authored by a group including UW-Madison ...
2021-06-04
In a large, international retrospective study, men at high risk for death from prostate cancer had a significant reduction in all-cause mortality if treated with radiation shortly after surgery.
Prostate cancer is one of the most common forms of cancer among men, and about 1-in-8 of them will be diagnosed with it during their lifetime. While most men are cured with available treatment, there remains a group at high risk for death. In the United States in 2020, 33,330 men died from the disease, making prostate cancer the second leading cause of cancer death for men in this country. Therefore, among those at highest risk of recurrence, metastasis, and death from prostate cancer, understanding what steps can be taken to lower these risks could save and extend lives.
Early ...
2021-06-04
Oak Brook, IL - The June edition of SLAS Discovery features the cover article, "A Perspective on Synthetic Biology in Drug Discovery and Development--Current Impact and Future Opportunities" by Florian David, Ph.D. (Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden), Andrew M. Davis, Ph.D. (AstraZeneca, Cambridge, England, UK). Michael Gossing, Ph.D., Martin A. Hayes, Ph.D., and Elvira Romero, Ph.D., and Louis H. Scott, Ph.D. (AstraZeneca, Gothenburg, Sweden), and Mark J. Wigglesworth, Ph.D. (AstraZeneca, London, England, UK).
In January 2021, a survey of immunologists, infectious-disease researchers and virologists found that 90% of respondents believe SARS-CoV-2 will become endemic, continuing to circulate in pockets of the global population ...
2021-06-04
An international subject pool was studied to confirm the effectiveness of a whole food complete vitamin and meal replacement product, IQed. The article, co-authored by Lisa Geng; Francine Hamel, EdD, SLP-CCC; Doreen Lewis, Ph.D., appeared in the peer-reviewed journal, Alternative Therapies (Altern Ther Health Med 2021 Mar;27(2):11-20(.
The findings indicate that the carefully developed nutritional supplement, IQed Smart Nutrition, can help bolster key functions for people with a wide range of prevalent diagnoses including Autism, Apraxia, ...
2021-06-04
Oak Brook, IL - The June edition of SLAS Technology is a Special Issue entitled, "Emerging Trends in 3D Cell Culture: High-Throughput Screening, Disease Modeling and Translational Medicine." Free online access to the articles in this collection is courtesy of Corning Life Sciences, the issue's sponsor.
Precision medicine is becoming an increasingly popular and powerful way to target and treat human diseases. Patient-derived cellular models ushered in high-throughput screenings (HTS) in laboratory automation. While the upkeep and expansion of cells for HTS is predominantly manual, this special issue explores an automated avenue for HTS in research settings that considers the expansion of cells. This design is flexible for research and development ...
2021-06-04
At Boston University, a team of researchers is working to better understand how language and speech is processed in the brain, and how to best rehabilitate people who have lost their ability to communicate due to brain damage caused by a stroke, trauma, or another type of brain injury. This type of language loss is called aphasia, a long-term neurological disorder caused by damage to the part of the brain responsible for language production and processing that impacts over a million people in the US.
"It's a huge problem," says Swathi Kiran, director of BU's Aphasia Research Lab, and College of Health & Rehabilitation Sciences: Sargent College associate dean for research and ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Cells/colony motion index of oral keratinocytes predicts epithelial regenerative capacity
The cells/colony motion index determined by non-invasive, quantitative measurements via optical flow algorithm is correlated with epithelial regenerative capacity of oral keratinocytes in mid-phase cultures, making it a reliable tool for quality control