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© K. Melican.
Human microvessel (red) colonized by N. meningitidis (green).
Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in eLife - 17 Dec 2025

Pinon L, Chabaud M, Nivoit P, Wong Ng J, Nguyen TT, Paul V, Bouquerel C, Goussard S, Smilovici P, Frachon E, Obino D, Gobaa S, Dumenil G

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 41406015

Link to DOI – 10.7554/eLife.107813

Elife 2025 Dec; 14():

Systemic infections leading to sepsis are life-threatening conditions that remain difficult to treat, and the limitations of current experimental models hamper the development of innovative therapies. Animal models are constrained by species-specific differences, while 2D cell culture systems fail to capture the complex pathophysiology of infection. To overcome these limitations, we developed a laser photoablation-generated, three-dimensional microfluidic model of meningococcal vascular colonization, a human-specific bacterium that causes sepsis and meningitis. Laser photoablation-generated hydrogel engineering allows the reproduction of vascular networks that are major infection target sites, and this model provides the relevant microenvironment reproducing the physiological endothelial integrity and permeability in vitro. By comparing with a human-skin xenograft mouse model, we show that the model system not only replicates in vivo key features of the infection, but also enables quantitative assessment with a higher spatiotemporal resolution of bacterial microcolony growth, endothelial cytoskeleton rearrangement, vascular E-selectin expression, and neutrophil response upon infection. Our device thus provides a robust solution bridging the gap between animal and 2D cellular models, paving the way for a better understanding of disease progression and developing innovative therapeutics.