Infection of Primary Nasal Epithelial Cells Grown at an Air-Liquid Interface to Characterize Human Coronavirus-Host Interactions

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Cited by 6

09:02 min

September 22nd, 2023

10.3791/64868-v

September 22nd, 2023

2.5K views

The nasal epithelium is the primary barrier site encountered by all respiratory pathogens. Here, we outline methods to use primary nasal epithelial cells grown as air-liquid interface (ALI) cultures to characterize human coronavirus-host interactions in a physiologically relevant system.

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Nasal Epithelial Cells

Chapters in this video

0:04

Introduction

0:57

Infection of Nasal Air‐Liquid Interface (ALI) Cultures

2:53

Collection and Quantification of the Shed Virus in Apical Surface Liquid (ASL)

3:49

Transepithelial Electrical Resistance (TEER) Measurement

5:25

Measuring Cytotoxicity by Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH) Assay

6:18

Results: Characterizing Viral Replication, Host Cell Tropism, and Virus‐Induced Cytotoxicity in Nasal ALI Cultures

8:11

Conclusion

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