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Using Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-derived Intestinal Organoids to Study and Modify Epithelial Cell Protection Against Salmonella and Other Pathogens
JoVE Revista
Inmunología y contagio
This content is Free Access.
JoVE Revista Inmunología y contagio
Using Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-derived Intestinal Organoids to Study and Modify Epithelial Cell Protection Against Salmonella and Other Pathogens
DOI:

10:59 min

May 12, 2019

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Capítulos

  • 00:04Título
  • 00:38Differentiation from iPSCs to the Hindgut
  • 01:10Embedding of the Hindgut in Basement Membrane Matrix
  • 03:13Maintenance, Passage, and Pre-stimulation of iHOs with rhIL-22
  • 05:28Microinjection of iHOs and Intracellular Invasion Assays
  • 09:19Results: Studying Epithelial Cell Protection Against Pathogens Using hiPSC-derived iHOs
  • 10:05Conclusion

Summary

Traducción Automática

Human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived intestinal organoids offer exciting opportunities to model enteric diseases in vitro. We demonstrate the differentiation of hiPSCs into intestinal organoids (iHOs), the stimulation of these iHOs with cytokines, and the microinjection of Salmonella Typhimurium into the iHO lumen, enabling the study of an epithelial invasion by this pathogen.

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