| Literature DB >> 28009813 |
Masaki Hosoya1, Katherine Czysz2.
Abstract
Despite continuous efforts to improve the process of drug discovery and development, achieving success at the clinical stage remains challenging because of a persistent translational gap between the preclinical and clinical settings. Under these circumstances, the discovery of human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells has brought new hope to the drug discovery field because they enable scientists to humanize a variety of pharmacological and toxicological models in vitro. The availability of human iPS cell-derived cells, particularly as an alternative for difficult-to-access tissues and organs, is increasing steadily; however, their use in the field of translational medicine remains challenging. Biomarkers are an essential part of the translational effort to shift new discoveries from bench to bedside as they provide a measurable indicator with which to evaluate pharmacological and toxicological effects in both the preclinical and clinical settings. In general, during the preclinical stage of the drug development process, in vitro models that are established to recapitulate human diseases are validated by using a set of biomarkers; however, their translatability to a clinical setting remains problematic. This review provides an overview of current strategies for human iPS cell-based drug discovery from the perspective of translational research, and discusses the importance of early consideration of clinically relevant biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: biomarker; drug discovery; iPS cells; translational research
Year: 2016 PMID: 28009813 PMCID: PMC5187530 DOI: 10.3390/cells5040046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Schematic illustration of the development process from patient-derived induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells to a new medication. Outline (A) and addition of the processes necessary from both the scientific and regulatory perspectives. (B) Biomarker strategy is highlighted by the dotted box.
Figure 2Diagnosis and patient stratification by using biomarkers. Application of iPS cell-based approach would be alternate way to identify drug responders and non-responders.
Figure 3Biomarkers in efficacy and safety assessments. Application of in vitro assessment with iPS cell-based assay would be able to predict success or risk of a drug discovery project at an earlier stage.
Human iPSC-derived cells as an in vitro screening platform for detection of drug-induced toxicity.
| Author/Year/Title | Expression of Stage-Specific Markers in Human iPS Cells | Toxic Compounds Tested | Biomarkers Tested | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hepatotoxicity | Ware et al. 2015 [ | CYP3A4 activity corresponding to ~90% of primary hepatocytes cultured for 24 h in vitro Albumin to alpha-fetoprotein ratio 12.2 at day 21 of culture | 47 compounds were segregated into three groups based on previous study performed on primary hepatocytes (hepatotoxic, non-hepatotoxic, and compounds previously incorrectly classified as non-toxic). | Albumin secretion (ELISA); Urea production | Micropatterned co-culture system of iPSC-hepatocytes with fibroblasts prolonged liver hepatic functions up to 4 weeks when compared with single culture condition. Co-cultured micropatterned hepatic cells showed predictive DILI capabilities of 65-70% and 100% for sensitivity and specificity, respectively. Changes in urea production was the most sensitive assay endpoint |
| Tasnim et al. 2016 [ | AFP, ALB, AAT, HNF4a, CYP3A4, CYP3A7, CYP1A1, CYP1A2, ASGPR, MRP2 (qRT-PCR) Urea and Albumin production CYP induction (LC-MS) | APAP, Troglitazone, Methotrexate (24 h exposure) | Cell viability | Cellulosic scaffolds used during final stage of maturation enhanced hPSC-hepatocyte functions, including CYP activity and sensitivity to methotrexate Expression of alpha-fetoprotein was higher than albumin at Day 20 and 32 in both 2D and 3D cultures, however the albumin to alpha-fetoprotein ratio was the highest at days 32 in the 3D cultured | |
| Cardiotoxicity | Liang et al. 2013 [ | Troponin T (FACS) Expression of cardiac ion channel: SCN5A, KCND3, CACNA1C, KCNH2, KCNQ1, KCNA5, HCN2, HCN4, KCNJ2, KCNJ3, KCNJ5, KCNJ11, KCNE1, KChIP2 (qRT-PCR) | Verpamil, Alfuzosin, Cisapride Nicorandil | CM/AP assay (compound muscle action potential) | hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes were shown to model cardiotoxicity more accurately than commercially available hERG cell lines |
| Nephrotoxicity | Morizane et al. 2015 [ | NPCs: 90% of NPC were positive for SIX2, SALL1, WT1, and PAX2; NPC-derived renal vesicles : 76% were positive for PAX8 and LHX1 segmental markers in nephron—like continuous structures: (A) glomerular podocytes: NPHS1 and PODXL; (B) proximal tubules: LTL and CDH2, (C) loops of Henle/distal tubules: E-Cad/CDH1, UMOD and BRN1 | Nephrotoxicants tested on hESCs-derived 3D kidney organoids: Gentamycin (48 h, at 5 mg/mL) Cisplatin (2,6,24 or 48 h; at 5 μM, 50 μM) | KIM-1, LTL, E-Cad (CDH1) (ICC, qRT-PCR) | In gentamicin-treated organoids KIM-1 was expressed at the luminal surface of LTL-positive tubules but was not detected in E-Cad/CDH1-positive cells. qRT-PCR analysis showed gentamycin-caused dose-dependent upregulation of this marker. Cisplatin upregulated KIM-1 expression in LTL-positive cells but also suppressed E-Cad/CDH1 expression, indicating both proximal and distal tubular toxicity |
| Kandasamy et al. 2015 [ | Proximal tubular-like cells expressed e.g., SIX2, WT1, GDNF, HOXD11, KSP-CAD, AQP1, OAT3, GGT, and other markers expressed along proximal tubular cell development; however some of the main stemness markers were highly also expressed | Nephrotoxicants tested: Aristolochic acid, Arsenic (III) oxide, Bismuth (III) oxide, Cadmium chloride, Cephalosporin C, Cisplatin, Citrinin, Copper (II) chloride, 5-Fluorouracil, Gentamicin, Gold (I) chloride, Lead acetate, Paraquat, Potassium dichromate, Puromycin, Rifampicin, Tacrolimus, Tobramycin; (16 h exposure, at 1, 10, 1000 μg/mL) | IL-6, IL-8 (qRT-PCR, normalized to GAPDH and PPIA) | Nephrotoxicity response in iPSC-derived HPTC-like cells were compared to the corresponding dataset from previous study on cultured human primary HPTC cells Comparative automated unbiased data analysis showed 99.8% and 87.0% training balanced accuracy and test balanced accuracy, respectively | |
| Neurotoxicity | Wheeler et al. 2015 [ | Cortical neurons were defined as Tuj1-positive and Nestin-negative (ICC) | 4 chemotherapeutics: Cisplatin, Paclitaxel, Vincristine, Hydroxyurea; (72 h exposure, at 0.001–100 μM) | Neurite outgrowth response upon chemotherapeutic treatment | The differences between selected paclitaxel-resistant and paclitaxel-sensitive LCL-derived neurons were significant but only partially correlated with the patient’s initial sensitivity to this chemotherapeutic Reduced TUBB2A sensitized iPSC-derived neurons to paclitaxel |