| Literature DB >> 26536291 |
Sarah Gordon1, Mardas Daneshian2, Joke Bouwstra3, Francesca Caloni4, Samuel Constant5, Donna E Davies6,7, Gudrun Dandekar8, Carlos A Guzman9, Eric Fabian10, Eleonore Haltner11, Thomas Hartung2,12, Nina Hasiwa2, Patrick Hayden13, Helena Kandarova14, Sangeeta Khare15, Harald F Krug16, Carsten Kneuer17, Marcel Leist2, Guoping Lian18,19, Uwe Marx20,21, Marco Metzger8, Katharina Ott10, Pilar Prieto22, Michael S Roberts23, Erwin L Roggen24, Tewes Tralau25, Claudia van den Braak26, Heike Walles8, Claus-Michael Lehr1.
Abstract
Models of the outer epithelia of the human body - namely the skin, the intestine and the lung - have found valid applications in both research and industrial settings as attractive alternatives to animal testing. A variety of approaches to model these barriers are currently employed in such fields, ranging from the utilization of ex vivo tissue to reconstructed in vitro models, and further to chip-based technologies, synthetic membrane systems and, of increasing current interest, in silico modeling approaches. An international group of experts in the field of epithelial barriers was convened from academia, industry and regulatory bodies to present both the current state of the art of non-animal models of the skin, intestinal and pulmonary barriers in their various fields of application, and to discuss research-based, industry-driven and regulatory-relevant future directions for both the development of new models and the refinement of existing test methods. Issues of model relevance and preference, validation and standardization, acceptance, and the need for simplicity versus complexity were focal themes of the discussions. The outcomes of workshop presentations and discussions, in relation to both current status and future directions in the utilization and development of epithelial barrier models, are presented by the attending experts in the current report.Entities:
Keywords: cytotoxicity; epithelial cell culture; in vitro models; permeability; transport studies
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26536291 DOI: 10.14573/altex.1510051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ALTEX ISSN: 1868-596X Impact factor: 6.043