Size-related variability of oxygen consumption rates in individual human hepatic cells

Abstract

Accurate descriptions of the variability in single-cell oxygen consumption and its size-dependency are key to establishing more robust tissue models. By combining microfabricated devices with multiparameter identification algorithms, we demonstrate that single human hepatocytes exhibit an oxygen level-dependent consumption rate and that their maximal oxygen consumption rate is significantly lower than that of typical hepatic cell cultures. Moreover, we found that clusters of two or more cells competing for a limited oxygen supply reduced their maximal consumption rate, highlighting their ability to adapt to local resource availability and the presence of nearby cells. We used our approach to characterize the covariance of size and oxygen consumption rate within a cell population, showing that size matters, since oxygen metabolism covaries lognormally with cell size. Our study paves the way for linking the metabolic activity of single human hepatocytes to their tissue- or organ-level metabolism and describing its size-related variability through scaling laws.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 Mar 2024
Accepted
22 Jul 2024
First published
26 Jul 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Lab Chip, 2024, Accepted Manuscript

Size-related variability of oxygen consumption rates in individual human hepatic cells

E. Botte, Y. Cui, C. Magliaro, M. Tenje, K. Koren, A. Rinaldo, R. Stocker, L. Behrendt and A. Ahluwalia, Lab Chip, 2024, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D4LC00204K

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