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Infezione di cellule epiteliali nasali primarie cresciute in un'interfaccia aria-liquido per caratterizzare le interazioni uomo-coronavirus-ospite
JoVE Journal
Immunology and Infection
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JoVE Journal Immunology and Infection
Infection of Primary Nasal Epithelial Cells Grown at an Air-Liquid Interface to Characterize Human Coronavirus-Host Interactions
DOI:

09:02 min

September 22, 2023

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Chapters

  • 00:04Introduction
  • 00:57Infection of Nasal Air‐Liquid Interface (ALI) Cultures
  • 02:53Collection and Quantification of the Shed Virus in Apical Surface Liquid (ASL)
  • 03:49Transepithelial Electrical Resistance (TEER) Measurement
  • 05:25Measuring Cytotoxicity by Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH) Assay
  • 06:18Results: Characterizing Viral Replication, Host Cell Tropism, and Virus‐Induced Cytotoxicity in Nasal ALI Cultures
  • 08:11Conclusion

Summary

Automatic Translation

L'epitelio nasale è il sito di barriera primario incontrato da tutti i patogeni respiratori. Qui, descriviamo i metodi per utilizzare le cellule epiteliali nasali primarie cresciute come colture di interfaccia aria-liquido (ALI) per caratterizzare le interazioni coronavirus-ospite umano in un sistema fisiologicamente rilevante.

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