| Literature DB >> 24565163 |
Margaret L Sutherland, Kristin M Fabre, Danilo A Tagle.
Abstract
The National Institutes of Health has partnered with the US Food and Drug Administration and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to accelerate the development of human microphysiological systems (MPS) that address challenges faced in predictive toxicity assessment and efficacy analysis of new molecular entities during the preclinical phase of drug development. Use of human MPS could provide better models for predicting the efficacy of new molecular entities in clinical trials. It is also anticipated that improvements in predicting drug toxicities early in the drug development process through the use of MPS or human organs-on-a-chip will decrease the need to withdraw new therapies from the market and minimize or eliminate deaths due to unidentified drug toxicities.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24565163 PMCID: PMC4029183 DOI: 10.1186/scrt361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
The U18: 2-year funded National Institutes of Health Microphysiological Systems Program investigators
| Primary U18 investigator | Institution | Title |
|---|---|---|
| James M Wells, PhD | Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, OH | Generating human intestinal organoids with an enteric nervous system |
| Angela Christiano, PhD | Columbia University Health Sciences, New York City, NY | Modeling complex disease using induced pluripotent stem cell-derived skin constructs |
| Mark Donowitz, MD | Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD | Human intestinal organoids: preclinical models of noninflammatory diarrhea |
| Thomas Hartung, MD, PhD | Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD | Three-dimensional model of human brain development for studying gene/environment interactions |
| John P Lynch, MD, PhD | University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA | Modeling oxidative stress and DNA damage using a gastrointestinal organotypic culture system |
| Rocky S Tuan, PhD | University of Pittsburgh, PA | Three-dimensional osteochondral micro-tissue to model pathogenesis of osteoarthritis |
| Joan E Nichols, PhD | The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, TX | Three-dimensional human lung model to study lung disease and formation of fibrosis |
The emphasis of these 2-year grants is the incorporation of human embryonic, induced pluripotent stem cell and progenitor cell sources into organ-specific microphysiological systems. The multicellular models developed will represent the three-dimensional architecture and cellular composition of the organ being modeled, and will lead to the development of microphysiological systems that represent the function of the target organ under normal physiological conditions and disease states.
The UH2/UH3: 5-year funded National Institutes of Health Microphysiological Systems Program investigators
| Primary UH2 investigators | Institution | Title |
|---|---|---|
| Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic, PhD | Columbia University in the City of New York, NY | Integrated heart-liver-vascular systems for drug testing in human health and disease |
| Michael L Shuler, PhD and James J Hickman, PhD | Cornell University, Ithaca, NY and University of Central Florida, FL | Microphysiological systems and low-cost microfluidic platform with analytics |
| George A Truskey, PhD | Duke University, Durham, NC | Circulatory system and integrated muscle tissue for drug and tissue toxicity |
| Kevin K Parker, PhD | Harvard University, Cambridge, MA | Human cardiopulmonary system on a chip |
| Linda G Griffith, PhD | Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA | All-human microphysical model of metastasis and therapy |
| James A Thomson, VMD, PhD | Morgridge Institute for Research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, WI | Human induced pluripotent stem cell and embryonic stem cell-based models for predictive neural toxicity and teratogenicity |
| Teresa K Woodruff, PhD | Northwestern University, Chicago, IL | |
| Kevin E Healy, PhD and Luke P Lee, PhD | University of California, Berkeley, CA | Disease-specific integrated microphysiological human tissue models |
| Steven C George, MD, PhD | University of California, Irvine, CA | An integrated |
| D Lansing Taylor, PhD and Martin L Yarmush, MD, PhD | University of Pittsburgh, PA and Rutgers University, NJ | Three-dimensional biomimetic liver sinusoid construct for predicting physiology and toxicity |
| Jonathan Himmelfarb, MD | University of Washington, Seattle, WA | A tissue-engineered human kidney microphysiological system |
| John P Wikswo, PhD, Damir Janigro, PhD, Donna Webb, PhD and Kevin Niswender, PhD | Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN | Neurovascular unit on a chip: chemical communication, drug and toxin responses |
The National Institutes of Health has issued 12 (UH2/UH3) 5-year awards to fund the development of microphysiological system platforms that represent a number of human organ systems. In the first 2-year phase of the Microphysiological Systems (MPS) Program (UH2), investigators will create functionally and physiologically relevant microsystems, which will accurately reflect tissue complexity, and genomic diversity. The scientific objectives of the UH2 development phase include demonstration that the microphysiological system: represents the multicellular architecture of the target organ; has viable and reproducible function for 4 weeks under physiological conditions; accurately recapitulates disease and pathogenic phenotypes; and can be adapted to high content screening for repeated dose efficacy testing and toxicology. The MPS investigators who successfully achieve the UH2 milestone goals will advance to the UH3 (3-year) phase, which involves MPS integration onto a common platform, and validation of the accurate function of integrated systems on the platform through blinded testing of drugs with known toxicities and mechanisms of action.