Persistent effectivity of gas plasma-treated, long time-stored liquid on epithelial cell adhesion capacity and membrane morphology

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Date
2014
Volume
9
Issue
8
Journal
Series Titel
Book Title
Publisher
San Francisco, CA : Public Library of Science
Abstract

Research in plasma medicine includes a major interest in understanding gas plasma-cell interactions. The immediate application of gas plasma in vitro inhibits cell attachment, vitality and cell-cell contacts via the liquid. Interestingly, in our novel experiments described here we found that the liquid-mediated plasma effect is long-lasting after storage up to seven days; i. e. the liquid preserves the characteristics once induced by the argon plasma. Therefore, the complete Dulbecco's Modified Eagle cell culture medium was argon plasma-treated (atmospheric pressure, kINPen09) for 60 s, stored for several days (1, 4 and 7 d) at 37°C and added to a confluent mouse hepatocyte epithelial cell (mHepR1) monolayer. Impaired tight junction architecture as well as shortened microvilli on the cell membrane could be observed, which was accompanied by the loss of cell adhesion capacity. Online-monitoring of vital cells revealed a reduced cell respiration. Our first timedependent analysis of plasma-treated medium revealed that temperature, hydrogen peroxide production, pH and oxygen content can be excluded as initiators of cell physiological and morphological changes. The here observed persisting biological effects in plasma-treated liquids could open new medical applications in dentistry and orthopaedics.

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Keywords
argon, hydrogen peroxide, argon, culture medium, gas, animal cell, article, atmospheric pressure, cell adhesion, cell function, cell respiration, controlled study, culture medium, epithelium cell, gas flow, liquid, liver cell, membrane structure, microvillus, monolayer culture, mouse, nonhuman, pH measurement, storage, temperature sensitivity, tight junction, animal, cell line, cell membrane, cell survival, cytology, epithelium cell, gas, metabolism, preservation, procedures, ultrastructure, Animals, Argon, Cell Adhesion, Cell Line, Cell Membrane, Cell Survival, Culture Media, Epithelial Cells, Gases, Hepatocytes, Mice, Microvilli, Preservation, Biological, Tight Junctions
Citation
Hoentsch, M., Bussiahn, R., Rebl, H., Bergemann, C., Eggert, M., Frank, M., et al. (2014). Persistent effectivity of gas plasma-treated, long time-stored liquid on epithelial cell adhesion capacity and membrane morphology. 9(8). https://doi.org//10.1371/journal.pone.0104559
License
CC BY 3.0 Unported