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    Home»Biology»Scientists Have Created “Immortal” Human Lip Cells
    Biology

    Scientists Have Created “Immortal” Human Lip Cells

    By FrontiersNovember 9, 2024No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Cells Clean Illustration
    Scientists have successfully immortalized human lip cells, enabling the creation of lab models that mimic natural lip tissue, which could improve treatments for lip injuries and diseases. These new cell lines, derived from donated tissue, are stable, non-cancerous, and responsive to experimental conditions, making them a promising tool for various medical applications. (Artist’s concept.)

    Scientists have successfully immortalized lip cells, creating a clinically relevant lab model that enables testing of new treatments for injuries and infections.

    We use our lips to talk, eat, drink, and breathe; they also reflect our emotions, health, and aesthetic appeal. This range of functions relies on a complex structure, making lip problems challenging to treat effectively. Basic research is crucial to improving these treatments, yet until now, models using lip cells — which function differently from other skin cells — have not been available.

    In a new study published in Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, scientists report the successful immortalization of donated lip cells, allowing for the development of clinically relevant lip models in the lab. This proof-of-concept, once expanded, could benefit thousands of patients.

    “The lip is a very prominent feature of our face,” said Dr Martin Degen of the University of Bern. “Any defects in this tissue can be highly disfiguring. But until now, human lip cell models for developing treatments were lacking. With our strong collaboration with the University Clinic for Pediatric Surgery, Bern University Hospital, we were able to change that, using lip tissue that would have been discarded otherwise.”

    Lip service

    Primary cells donated directly from an individual are ideal for this kind of research, because they’re believed to retain similar characteristics to the original tissue. However, these cells can’t be reproduced indefinitely, and are often difficult and expensive to acquire.

    “Human lip tissue is not regularly obtainable,” explained Degen. “Without these cells, it is impossible to mimic the characteristics of lips in vitro.”

    The second-best option would be immortalized lip cells which can be grown in the lab. To achieve this, scientists alter the expression of certain genes, allowing the cells to carry on reproducing when they would normally reach the end of their life cycle and stop.

    The scientists selected skin cells from tissue donated by two patients: one undergoing treatment for a lip laceration, and one undergoing treatment for a cleft lip. The scientists used a retroviral vector to deactivate a gene which stops a cell’s life cycle and to alter the length of the telomeres on the ends of each chromosome, which improves the cells’ longevity.

    These new cell lines were then tested rigorously to make sure that the genetic code of the cell lines remained stable as they replicated and retained the same characteristics as primary cells. To make sure the immortalized cells hadn’t developed cancer-like characteristics, the scientists looked for any chromosomal abnormalities and tried to grow both the new lines and a line of cancer cells on soft agar — only cancer cells should be able to grow on this medium. The cell lines displayed no chromosomal abnormalities and couldn’t grow on the agar. The scientists also confirmed that the cell lines behaved like their unmodified primary counterparts by testing their protein and mRNA production.

    Mona Lisa smile

    Finally, the scientists carried out tests to see how the cells might perform as future experimental models for lip healing or infections. First, to see if the cells could act as accurate proxies for wound healing, they scratched samples of the cells. Untreated cells closed the wound after eight hours, while cells treated with growth factors closed the wound more quickly; these results matched those seen in skin cells from other body parts.

    Next the scientists developed 3D models using the cells and infected them with Candida albicans, a yeast that can cause serious infections in people with weak immune systems or cleft lips. The cells performed as expected, the pathogen rapidly invading the model as it would infect real lip tissue.

    “Our laboratory focuses on obtaining a better knowledge of the genetic and cellular pathways involved in cleft lip and palate,” said Degen. “However, we are convinced that 3D models established from healthy immortalized lip cells have the potential to be very useful in many other fields of medicine.”

    “One challenge is that lip keratinocytes can be of labial skin, mucosal, or mixed character,” he added. “Depending on the research question, a particular cell identity might be required. But we have the tools to characterize or purify these individual populations in vitro.”

    Reference: “Immortalization of patient-derived lip cells for establishing 3D lip models” by Farah Mansour, Ludovica Parisi, Silvia Rihs, Isabelle Schnyder, Giorgio C. La Scala, Nijas Aliu, Christos Katsaros and Martin Degen, 29 August 2024, Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology.
    DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2024.1449224

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