| Literature DB >> 24565476 |
Abhinav Bhushan, Nina Senutovitch, Shyam S Bale, William J McCarty, Manjunath Hegde, Rohit Jindal, Inna Golberg, O Berk Usta, Martin L Yarmush, Lawrence Vernetti, Albert Gough, Ahmet Bakan, Tong Ying Shun, Richard DeBiasio, D Lansing Taylor.
Abstract
Although the process of drug development requires efficacy and toxicity testing in animals prior to human testing, animal models have limited ability to accurately predict human responses to xenobiotics and other insults. Societal pressures are also focusing on reduction of and, ultimately, replacement of animal testing. However, a variety of in vitro models, explored over the last decade, have not been powerful enough to replace animal models. New initiatives sponsored by several US federal agencies seek to address this problem by funding the development of physiologically relevant human organ models on microscopic chips. The eventual goal is to simulate a human-on-a-chip, by interconnecting the organ models, thereby replacing animal testing in drug discovery and development. As part of this initiative, we aim to build a three-dimensional human liver chip that mimics the acinus, the smallest functional unit of the liver, including its oxygen gradient. Our liver-on-a-chip platform will deliver a microfluidic three-dimensional co-culture environment with stable synthetic and enzymatic function for at least 4 weeks. Sentinel cells that contain fluorescent biosensors will be integrated into the chip to provide multiplexed, real-time readouts of key liver functions and pathology. We are also developing a database to manage experimental data and harness external information to interpret the multimodal data and create a predictive platform.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24565476 PMCID: PMC4028964 DOI: 10.1186/scrt377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Figure 1Liver acinus module with microchip. (A) The liver acinus module with a microchip, including a diagram of four liver cell types and sentinel biosensor cells layered in the device. (B) High content analysis of microchip device and quantitation. (C) Graphic depiction of data from device and external sources supplied to database.
Figure 2Preliminary results. (A) Diagram of flow conditions for hepatocytes in collagen gel in the microfluidic device. PDMS, polydimethylsiloxane. (B) Microfluidic channels 50 μm wide, 10 mm long, and 100 μm tall with grooves to represent a liver sinusoid. (C) Phase image of primary hepatocytes in a microgrooved channel [27]. (D), (E) Live primary rat hepatocytes stained for live (celcein)/dead (ethidium homodimer-1) cells at days 3 and 9. (F) Fixed primary rat hepatocytes stained for intracellular albumin (anti-rat albumin antibody; Abcam, Cambridge, MA, USA). (G), (H) Primary human hepatocyte sentinel cells expressing reactive oxygen species (ROS) biosensor treated with dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO; control) or 100 μmol menadione for approximately 4 hours. (I), (J) Primary human hepatocyte sentinel cells expressing mitochondrial function biosensor treated with DMSO (control) or 100 μmol menadione, approximately 16 hours after addition of treatments.