Characterizing Aerosolization and Deposition of Nanoparticles for Air-Liquid Interface Exposed 16HBE Cells
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
IISER Mohali
Abstract
The Air-Liquid Interface (ALI) culture technique offers a physiologically relevant in vitro
recapitulation of healthy and diseased human respiratory environment. Combined with
commercially available aerosol generation systems, this technique can be leveraged to develop a
cell exposure system capable of directly depositing engineered aerosols, allowing for rapid drug
delivery applications. Here, we attempted to establish methodologies for developing such a cell
exposure system, utilizing the 16HBE cell line for an ALI model and a commercially available
aerosol chamber to devise QCM-based detection methods and a fluorescence-based assay to
quantify deposited aerosols. The results from this study may assist future investigations in
assessing the accurate cell-delivered dose of inhalable therapeutics, particularly for influenza
infections and cystic fibrosis.
Description
Under Embargo Period