Photodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy (Aug 2024)

A novel H‑tert immortalized human sebaceous gland cell line (XL-i-20) for the investigation of photodynamic therapy

  • Jia Liu,
  • Detian Xu,
  • Jianna Yan,
  • Bo Wang,
  • Linglin Zhang,
  • Xiaojing Liu,
  • Haiyan Zhang,
  • Guorong Yan,
  • Jiayi Yang,
  • Qingyu Zeng,
  • Xiuli Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 48
p. 104238

Abstract

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Background: Acne vulgaris is a species-specific human disease. To date, there has been no established human sebocyte cell line of Asian origin. Our previous study has demonstrated the efficacy of 5-aminolevulinic acid photodynamic therapy (ALA-PDT) in the treatment of acne vulgaris, primarily attributed to its cytotoxic properties; however, its regulatory mechanism remains largely unknown. Objectives: To establish an immortalized human sebocyte cell line derived from Chinese population and investigate the underlying mechanism of ALA-PDT. Methods: Human primary sebocytes were transfected with the human tert gene (h‑tert). The biological characteristics, including cell proliferation, cell markers, and sebum secretion function, were compared between primary sebocytes and the immortalized sebocytes (XL-i-20). Stimulations such as ALA-PDT, were applied respectively to both primary sebocytes and XL-i-20 cells to assess changes in their cellular functions. The transcriptome differences between primary sebocytes and XL-i-20 sebocytes were investigated using RNA-seq analysis. The XL-i-20 cell line was used to establish a sebaceous gland (SG) organoid culture, serving as a representative model of SG for the investigation of ALA-PDT. Results: The h‑tert immortalized sebocyte cell line exhibited the ability to be consecutively cultured for more than fifty passages. Both primary and immortalized cells expressed sebocyte markers such as epithelial membrane antigens (EMA, or MUC-1), Cytokeratin 7 (CK7) and adipose differentiation-related protein associated antigens (ADRP), and maintained sebum secretion function. The proliferative capacity of XL-i-20 was found to be significantly higher than that of primary sebocytes. The responses of XL-i-20 to ALA-PDT were indistinguishable from those elicited by primary sebocytes. Cell viability and sebum secretion were decreased after ALA-PDT in both two cell lines, and lipid-related proteins (SREBP-1/PPARγ) were down-regulated. The transcriptome data consistently demonstrated upregulation of genes related to inflammatory responses and downregulation of genes involved in lipid metabolism in both cell types following PDT. The analysis of common differential genes of primary sebocytes and XL-i-20 sebocytes post ALA-PDT showed that TNF signaling pathways, MAPK signaling pathways and JAK-STAT signaling pathways were activated. The SG organoids were spherical, which expressed markers of FANS and PLET1. Ki-67 was down-regulated after ALA-PDT. Conclusions: We have developed an h‑tert immortalized sebocyte cell line from an Asian population. The cell line, XL-i-20, maintains the essential characteristics of its parent primary sebocytes. Moreover, XL-i-20 sebocyte exhibited a significant respond to ALA-PDT, demonstrating comparable phenotypic and molecular changes to primary sebocytes. Therefore, XL-i-20 and its derived SG organoid serve as appropriate in vitro models for investigating the efficacy and mechanisms of ALA-PDT in SG-related diseases.

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