Model of Chemotherapy-associated Mucositis and Oral Opportunistic Infections

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Abstract

Oral mucositis is a common complication of cancer chemotherapy treatment. Because of the lack of relevant oral mucositis experimental models, it is not clear how chemotherapeutic agents injure the oral mucosa and if commensal microorganisms accelerate tissue damage. We developed an organotypic oral mucosa model that mimics cellular responses commonly associated with cytotoxic chemotherapy. The organotypic model consists of multilayer oral epithelial cells growing over a collagen type I matrix, with embedded fibroblasts. Treatment of organotypic constructs with the chemotherapeutic agent, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), leads to major histopathologic changes resembling mucositis, such as DNA synthesis inhibition, increased apoptosis and cytoplasmic vacuolation. Candida albicans formed mucosal biofilms on these tissues and augmented the inflammatory responses to 5-FU. This model can be used in further mechanistic studies of oral mucositis and associated opportunistic infections.

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Sobue, T., Bertolini, M., Thompson, A., & Dongari-Bagtzoglou, A. (2019). Model of Chemotherapy-associated Mucositis and Oral Opportunistic Infections. Bio-Protocol, 9(21). https://doi.org/10.21769/BioProtoc.3411

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