7 research outputs found
Effect of dephytinization on bioavailability of iron, calcium and zinc from infant cereals assessed in the Caco-2 cell model
AIM: To test the effect of the dephytinization of three different commercial infant cereals on iron, calcium, and zinc bioavailability by estimating the uptake, retention, and transport by Caco-2 cells
An Inter-laboratory Study to Evaluate the Effects of Medium Composition on the Differentiation and Barrier Function of Caco-2 Cell Lines
Differentiated human intestinal Caco-2 cells are frequently used in toxicology and pharmacology as in vitro models for studies on intestinal barrier functions. Since several discrepancies exist among the different lines and clones of Caco-2 cells, comparison of the results obtained and optimisation of models for use for regulatory purposes are particularly difficult, especially with respect to culture conditions and
morphological and biochemical parameters. An inter-laboratory study has been performed on the parental
cell line and on three clonal Caco-2 cell lines, with the aim of standardising the culture conditions and identifying
the best cell line with respect to parameters relevant to barrier integrity, namely, trans-epithelial
electrical resistance (TEER) and mannitol passage, and of epithelial differentiation (alkaline phosphatase
activity). Comparison of the cell lines maintained in traditional serum-supplemented culture medium or in
defined medium, containing insulin, transferrin, selenium and lipids, showed that parameter performance
was better and more reproducible with the traditional medium. The maintenance of the cell lines for 15
days in culture was found to be sufficient for the development of barrier properties, but not for full epithelial
differentiation. Caco-2/TC7 cells performed better than the other three cell lines, both in terms of reproducibility
and performance, exhibiting low TEER and mannitol passage, and high alkaline phosphatase
activity.JRC.I.2-Validation of biomedical testing method