Litcius/Paper detail

Generation of Human Lung Organoid Cultures from Healthy and Tumor Tissue to Study Infectious Diseases

Lorena Salgueiro, Susann Kummer, Vera Sonntag-Buck, Anne Weiß, Marc A. Schneider, Hans‐Georg Kräusslich, Rocı́o Sotillo

2022Journal of Virology30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Three-dimensional (3D) human lung organoids reflect the native cell composition of the lung as well as its physiological properties. Human 3D lung organoids offer ideal conditions, such as timely availability in large quantities and high physiological relevance for reassessment and prediction of disease outbreaks of respiratory pathogens and pathogens that use the lung as a primary entry portal. Human lung organoids can be used in basic research and diagnostic settings as early warning cell culture systems and also serve as a relevant platform for modeling infectious diseases and drug development. They can be used to characterize pathogens and analyze the influence of infection on, for example, immunological parameters, such as the expression of interferon-associated and proinflammatory genes in the context of cancer. In our study, we found that cancer-derived lung organoids were more sensitive to influenza A virus infection than those derived from healthy tissue and demonstrated a decreased innate immune response.

Topics & Concepts

OrganoidBiologyProinflammatory cytokineContext (archaeology)LungImmunologyLung cancerInnate immune systemImmune systemVirologyPathologyMedicineInflammationCell biologyPaleontologyInternal medicineNeonatal Respiratory Health ResearchCancer Cells and MetastasisRespiratory viral infections research