Fibroblasts as an experimental model system for the study of comparative physiology

Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol. 2022 Jun-Jul:260:110735. doi: 10.1016/j.cbpb.2022.110735. Epub 2022 Mar 20.

Abstract

Mechanistic evaluations of processes that underlie organism-level physiology often require reductionist approaches. Dermal fibroblasts offer one such approach. These cells are easily obtained from minimally invasive skin biopsy, making them appropriate for the study of protected and/or logistically challenging species. Cell culture approaches permit extensive and fine-scale sampling regimes as well as gene manipulation techniques that are not feasible in vivo. Fibroblast isolation and culture protocols are outlined here for primary cells, and the benefits and drawbacks of immortalization are discussed. We show examples of physiological metrics that can be used to characterize primary cells (oxygen consumption, translation, proliferation) and readouts that can be informative in understanding cell-level responses to environmental stress (lactate production, heat shock protein induction). Importantly, fibroblasts may display fidelity to whole animal physiological phenotypes, facilitating their study. Fibroblasts from Antarctic Weddell seals show greater resilience to low temperatures and hypoxia exposure than fibroblasts from humans or rats. Fibroblast oxygen consumption rates are not affected by temperature stress in the heat-tolerant camel, whereas similar temperature exposures depress mitochondrial metabolism in fibroblasts from rhinoceros. Finally, dermal fibroblasts from a hibernator, the meadow jumping mouse, better resist experimental cooling than a fibroblast line from the laboratory mouse, with the hibernator demonstrating a greater maintenance of homeostatic processes such as protein translation. These results exemplify the parallels that can be drawn between fibroblast physiology and expectations in vivo, and provide evidence for the power of fibroblasts as a model system to understand comparative physiology and biomedicine.

Keywords: Dermal fibroblast; Environmental stress; Immortalization; Primary cell culture; Skin biopsy.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cells, Cultured
  • Fibroblasts* / metabolism
  • Heat-Shock Proteins / metabolism
  • Mice
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Physiology, Comparative*
  • Rats
  • Skin / metabolism

Substances

  • Heat-Shock Proteins