JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, N.I.H., EXTRAMURAL
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Method for measuring extracellular flux from intact polarized epithelial monolayers.

Purpose: The Seahorse XFp platform is widely used for metabolic assessment of cultured cells. Current methods require replating of cells into specialized plates. This is problematic for certain cell types, such as primary human fetal RPE (hfRPE) cells, which must be cultured for months to become properly differentiated. Our goal was to overcome this limitation by devising a method for assaying intact cell monolayers with the Seahorse XFp, without the need for replating.

Methods: Primary hfRPE cells were differentiated by prolonged culture on filter inserts. Triangular sections of filters with differentiated cells attached were excised, transferred to XFp cell culture miniplate wells, immobilized at the bottoms, and subjected to mitochondrial stress tests. Replated cells were measured for comparison. Differentiated hfRPE cells were challenged or not with bovine photoreceptor outer segments (POS), and mitochondrial stress tests were performed 3.5 h later, after filter excision and transfer to assay plates.

Results: Differentiated hfRPE cells assayed following filter excision demonstrated increased maximal respiration, increased spare respiration capacity, and increased extracellular acidification rate (ECAR) relative to replated controls. hfRPE cells challenged with POS exhibited increased maximal respiration and spare capacity, with no apparent change in the ECAR, relative to untreated controls.

Conclusions: We have developed a method to reproducibly assay intact, polarized monolayers of hfRPE cells with the Seahorse XFp platform and have shown that the method yields more robust metabolic measurements compared to standard methods and is suitable for assessing the consequences of prolonged perturbations of differentiated cells. We expect our approach to be useful for a variety of studies involving metabolic assessment of adherent cells cultured on filters.

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