| Literature DB >> 31703369 |
Vanessa Mancini1, Virginia Pensabene1,2.
Abstract
Microfluidic-based technology attracts great interest in cell biology and medicine, in virtue of the ability to better mimic the in vivo cell microenvironment compared to conventional macroscale cell culture platforms. Recent Organs-on-chip (OoC) models allow to reproduce in vitro tissue and organ-level functions of living organs and systems. These models have been applied for the study of specific functions of the female reproductive tract, which is composed of several organs interconnected through intricate endocrine pathways and communication mechanisms. To date, a disease and toxicology study of this system has been difficult to perform. Thus, there is a compelling need to develop innovative platforms for the generation of disease model and for performing drug toxicity/screening in vitro studies. This review is focused on the analysis of recently published OoC models that recreate pathological and physiological characteristics of the female reproductive organs and tissues. These models aim to be used to assess changes in metabolic activity of the specific cell types and the effect of exposure to hormonal treatment or chemical substances on some aspects of reproduction and fertility. We examined these models in terms of device specifications, operating procedures, accuracy for studying the biochemical and functional activity of living tissues and the paracrine signalling that occurs within the different tissues. These models represent a powerful tool for understanding important diseases and syndromes affecting women all around the world. Immediate adoption of these models will allow to clarify diseases, causes and adverse events occurring during pregnancy such as pre-eclampsia, infertility or preterm birth, endometriosis and infertility.Entities:
Keywords: preterm; reproductive organs; women health
Year: 2019 PMID: 31703369 PMCID: PMC6956296 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering6040103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Figure 1Schematic frontal view of the human female reproductive system.
Figure 2The extraembryonic membranes.
Examples of Organs-on-chip models of the female reproductive system.
| Organ Model | Placenta-On-Chip (15) | Placenta-On-Chip (16) | Uterus-On-Chip (17) | Endometrium-On-Chip (32) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Human trophoblast (BeWo b30) cell line | Human trophoblast (JEG-3) cell line | Mouse oocyte | Human primary endometrial stromal cells | |
| Human primary placental villous endothelial cells | Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) | Mouse endometrial epithelial cells | HUVECs | ||
|
| Medium | Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle Medium (DMEM) and Endothelial cell growth medium (EGM™-2) | DMEM and EGM™-2 | EmbryoMax® Modified M16 Medium | EGM™-2 |
| Temperature | 37 °C | 37 °C | 37 °C | 37 °C | |
| O2 tension | Not applicable (N.A.) | N.A. | N.A. | 95% | |
| CO2 | N.A. | 5% | 5% | 5% | |
|
| Top Layer | Channel: 1 mm × 1.5 cm × 135 μm (w × l × h) | Channel: 500 μm × 200 μm (w × h) | Zigzag Channel: 500 μm × 110 μm (w × h) | Chamber: 7.75 mm × 6.2 mm |
| Bottom Layer | Channel: 1 mm × 1.5 cm ×135 μm (w × l × h) | Channel: 500 μm × 200 μm (w × h) | Channels: 6 mm × 3 mm × 0.11 mm (l × w × h) | Chamber: 7.75 mm × 6.2 mm | |
| Device Material | Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) | PDMS | PDMS | PDMS | |
| Membrane Material | Polycarbonate (PC) | Vitrified collagen | PC | Epoxy resin (EPON 1002F) | |
| Membrane Pore size | 1 μm | N.A. | 8 μm | 2 μm | |
|
| Coating | Fibronectin | Fibronectin and gelatin | Gelatin | Matrigel |
| Static versus dynamic | Dynamic | Dynamic | Dynamic | Static/dynamic | |
| Flow rate | 100 μL h−1 | 30 μL h−1 | 10 μL h−1 | 1 μL min−1 |