2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
(437f) Neutrophils Demonstrate Unique Functional Responses to Diverse Bacterial Pathogens in an Infection-on-a-Chip Microfluidic Model
Authors
To fabricate our infection-on-a-chip model, endothelial lumens were fabricated in collagen matrices to create model blood vessels and tissue structures. Primary human neutrophils were seeded in the lumens and each bacterial species was individually added to the bacterial port to create a gradient of bacteria perpendicular to the lumen edge. Neutrophil extravasation, migration, and ROS generation were visualized using time-lapse confocal microscopy.
We found significantly more neutrophils extravasated in response to L. monocytogenes compared to the other bacterial species. Interestingly, the rate of neutrophil extravasation was similar in response to L. monocytogenes and P. aeruginosa for the first 3 hours but while the normalized number of extravasated neutrophils plateaued in response to P. aeruginosa at 4 hours, the number of extravasated neutrophils continued to increase in response to L. monocytogenes for 10 hours. Interestingly, all responses required IL-6 signaling from the endothelium for an efficient response. We also investigated neutrophil migration in the tissue following extravasation in response to all four bacterial species. No strong patterns in neutrophil migration speed, length, and distance emerged between bacterial species but, intriguingly, neutrophils had significantly increased migration path straightness in response to S. aureus, potentially indicating a more directed response.
We also investigated neutrophil antimicrobial function in the form of ROS generation using DHR123 to monitor intracellular ROS. We found that neutrophil produced significantly more ROS in response to the two gram-negative bacterial species (P. aeruginosa and S. enterica). We initially discovered this for neutrophils seeded in collagen gels in a 48-well plate format but found the same trend in our infection-on-a-chip device. Interestingly, we found significantly more neutrophils expressed ROS in our infection-on-a-chip device than in the well format, indicating the presence of the endothelial lumen and activation via extravasation has a significant effect on neutrophil function.
Together, these results highlight our deviceâs potential to identify aspects of the neutrophil response (extravasation, migration, antimicrobial function) that are unique to a single pathogen or a class of bacteria and to determine which factors are universally important to the neutrophil response. Furthermore, it illustrates the importance of investigating the neutrophil response in a physiologically relevant model of the human infectious microenvironment.