| Literature DB >> 24565109 |
Alec S T Smith, Christopher J Long, Bonnie J Berry, Christopher McAleer, Maria Stancescu, Peter Molnar, Paula G Miller, Mandy B Esch, Jean-Matthieu Prot, James J Hickman, Michael L Shuler.
Abstract
A multiorgan, functional, human in vitro assay system or 'Body-on-a-Chip' would be of tremendous benefit to the drug discovery and toxicology industries, as well as providing a more biologically accurate model for the study of disease as well as applied and basic biological research. Here, we describe the advances our team has made towards this goal, as well as the most pertinent issues facing further development of these systems. Description is given of individual organ models with appropriate cellular functionality, and our efforts to produce human iterations of each using primary and stem cell sources for eventual incorporation into this system. Advancement of the 'Body-on-a-Chip' field is predicated on the availability of abundant sources of human cells, capable of full differentiation and maturation to adult phenotypes, for which researchers are largely dependent on stem cells. Although this level of maturation is not yet achievable in all cell types, the work of our group highlights the high level of functionality that can be achieved using current technology, for a wide variety of cell types. As availability of functional human cell types for in vitro culture increases, the potential to produce a multiorgan in vitro system capable of accurately reproducing acute and chronic human responses to chemical and pathological challenge in real time will also increase.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24565109 PMCID: PMC4029761 DOI: 10.1186/scrt370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Figure 1Overview of a 10-chamber in vitro model. Overview of our 10-chamber in vitro model based on a simplified three-chamber system using gravity-driven flow [12]. (A) Prototype unit on a rocker platform. (B) Close-up inverted view of the prototype unit after a dye distribution study. (C) Exploded schematic showing the compartmentalization design for a 10-chamber system within this single unit. Barrier tissues (for example, gastrointestinal (GI) tract, skin, and so forth) are made by plating cells and allowing them to grow into a layer on a pretreated polycarbonate membrane (0.4 μm pore size) that was sandwiched between a chamber gasket and another gasket or a polycarbonate channel plate creating chambers for the cells. The design provides an apical and a basolateral side for each chamber, allowing passage of chemicals across the barrier. Nonbarrier tissues are three-dimensional constructs made by resuspending cells in hydrogels or plating them on a polymeric scaffold. The three-dimensional tissue constructs are placed directly onto a polycarbonate membrane that is again sandwiched between a chamber gasket and another gasket or polycarbonate channel plate creating the chambers for the cells.