| Literature DB >> 34286173 |
Chase P Monckton1, Grace E Brown1, Salman R Khetani1.
Abstract
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is a leading cause of drug attrition, which is partly due to differences between preclinical animals and humans in metabolic pathways. Therefore, in vitro human liver models are utilized in biopharmaceutical practice to mitigate DILI risk and assess related mechanisms of drug transport and metabolism. However, liver cells lose phenotypic functions within 1-3 days in two-dimensional monocultures on collagen-coated polystyrene/glass, which precludes their use to model the chronic effects of drugs and disease stimuli. To mitigate such a limitation, bioengineers have adapted tools from the semiconductor industry and additive manufacturing to precisely control the microenvironment of liver cells. Such tools have led to the fabrication of advanced two-dimensional and three-dimensional human liver platforms for different throughput needs and assay endpoints (e.g., micropatterned cocultures, spheroids, organoids, bioprinted tissues, and microfluidic devices); such platforms have significantly enhanced liver functions closer to physiologic levels and improved functional lifetime to >4 weeks, which has translated to higher sensitivity for predicting drug outcomes and enabling modeling of diseased phenotypes for novel drug discovery. Here, we focus on commercialized engineered liver platforms and case studies from the biopharmaceutical industry showcasing their impact on drug development. We also discuss emerging multi-organ microfluidic devices containing a liver compartment that allow modeling of inter-tissue crosstalk following drug exposure. Finally, we end with key requirements for engineered liver platforms to become routine fixtures in the biopharmaceutical industry toward reducing animal usage and providing patients with safe and efficacious drugs with unprecedented speed and reduced cost.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34286173 PMCID: PMC8286174 DOI: 10.1063/5.0051765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: APL Bioeng ISSN: 2473-2877
FIG 1.Commercially available liver models with different throughput, technological and physiological complexities, and cell sources for drug development. Figure created using BioRender.
FIG. 2.Micropatterned cocultures (MPCCs). (a) Primary human hepatocytes (PHH) display prototypical morphology (left, phase contrast), bile canaliculi formation (middle, transport of fluorescent dye), and relatively stable albumin secretion (right) within micropatterned clusters of empirically optimized dimensions and when surrounded by 3T3-J2 murine embryonic fibroblasts. Reproduced with permission from Khetani and Bhatia, Nat. Biotechnol. 26(1), 120 (2008). Copyright 2008 Springer Nature. (b) MPCCs subjected to a physiologically inspired medium containing human serum and physiologic insulin levels improved stability of functions (CYP3A4 shown here) to almost 10 weeks as compared to the use of the traditional (bovine serum, high insulin) culture medium utilized in the field of hepatocyte culture systems for drug screening. Reprinted with permission from Davidson et al., Toxicology 449, 152662 (2021). Copyright 2021 Elsevier. (c) Formation of drug metabolites mediated by different CYP enzymes across different culture models, such as HepG2 and HepaRG cancerous cell lines, induced pluripotent stem (iPSC) cell-derived hepatocyte-like monocultures, PHHs in suspension, randomly distributed cocultures of PHHs and 3T3-J2 fibroblasts (HμREL), and MPCCs (commercial name HepatoPac™). MPCCs had the highest levels of enzymatic activities overall. Reprinted with permission from Kratochwil et al., AAPS J. 19(2), 534–550 (2017). Copyright 2017 Author(s), licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. (d) Correlation of clearance rates for 26 compounds (high, medium, and low turnover compounds) obtained from MPCCs and as observed in the clinic. Reproduced with permission from Lin et al., Drug Metab. Dispos. 44(1), 127–136 (2016). Copyright 2016 ASPET. (e) Clearance of midazolam, a CYP3A4 substrate, was significantly enhanced when MPCCs were preincubated with CYP3A4 inducer drug, rifampin, and significantly inhibited when MPCCs were preincubated with CYP3A4 inhibitor drug, ritonavir, which is also observed in the clinic in humans. Reproduced with permission from Lin et al., Drug Metab. Dispos. 44(1), 127–136 (2016). Copyright 2016 ASPET. (f) Intermittently starving MPCCs of hormones and serum (bovine) every week for 2 days improves functional lifetime and prediction of drug toxicity outcomes as observed with interpolated IC50 values for toxins but lack of such values for non-toxins (N.T. = not toxic); on the other hand, non-starved cultures displayed several false positive compounds. Davidson and Khetani, Toxicol. Sci. 174(2), 266–277 (2020). Copyright 2020 Oxford University Press. (g) MPCCs display higher levels of sodium taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide (NTCP) as compared to random distributed cocultures (RCCs), which led to higher infectivity with hepatitis B virus (HBV) as evident from increased levels of shed HBV “s” antigen in supernatants (HBsAg). Reproduced with permission from Shlomai et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 111(33), 12193–12198 (2014). Copyright 2014 Author(s). (h) CD81, a Plasmodium entry factor, levels were high for 3 PHH donors cultured in MPCCs (left), which led to higher infection of MPCCs with P. falciparum (i.e., malaria) as compared to micropatterned hepatocytes only (Hep MP) or RCCs. Reprinted with permission from March et al., Cell Host Microbe 14(1), 104–115 (2013). Copyright 2013 Elsevier.
FIG. 3.3D spheroids, organoids, and bioprinted liver tissues. (a) InSphero spheroids containing primary human hepatocytes (PHHs, stained for glycogen with period acid Schiff, PAS, stain and positive for CK8), liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (CD31 positive), and Kupffer cells (CD68 positive). Reprinted with permission from Messner et al., Arch. Toxicol. 87(1), 209–213 (2013). Copyright 2013 Author(s), licensed under a Creative Commons (CC-BY) license. (b) Long-term retention of liver function (albumin shown here) in PHH-containing spheroids generated using commercially available ultra-low attachment plates. Reprinted with permission from Bell et al., Sci. Rep. 6, 25187 (2016). Copyright 2016 Author(s), licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. (c) Viability assessment via cellular ATP content of fialuridine-induced toxicity was improved over long-term (i.e., 28 days) treatment every 48-h in PHH-containing spheroids generated using ultra-low attachment plates. Reprinted with permission from Bell et al., Sci. Rep. 6, 25187 (2016). Copyright 2016 Author(s), licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. (d) A panel for drug compounds classified as severe, high, or low clinical drug-induced liver injury (DILI) positive were compared in InSphero PHH-containing spheroids (human liver microtissues or hLiMT) and 2D PHH monocultures; hLiMT predicted more IC50 values than 2D monocultures. Reprinted with permission from Proctor et al., Arch. Toxicol. 91(8), 2849–2863 (2017). Copyright 2017 Author(s), licensed under a Creative Commons (CC-BY) license. (e) Left to right: iPSCs, derived from diverse genetic backgrounds can be further gene edited using CRISPR. These iPSCs are then differentiated into foregut cells (not shown) in 2D monolayers, detached, and differentiated into human liver organoids (HLOs) with lumens in 384-well plates. High content imaging can be conducted on HLOs to determine the effects of drugs on markers, such as fluorescent bile analog excretion into the HLO lumen. Reprinted with permission from Shinozawa et al., Gastroenterology 160(3), 831–846 (2021). Copyright 2021 Elsevier. (f) A high-throughput droplet microfluidic device for the generation of 3D liver microtissues. Left to right: Hepatocytes are suspended in collagen solution and perfused through the microfluidic device at 4 °C (to keep collagen from polymerizing) with an oil stream; since oil and water do not mix, the collagen + cells form spherical droplets. These so-called microtissues are collected, heated at 37 °C to promote collagen polymerization and cell encapsulation, oil is drained, and microtissues are resuspended in culture medium within microwells in static or fluidic plates/devices. The hepatocytes can be cocultured with non-parenchymal cell (NPC) types by either co-encapsulating both cell types within the microtissue or by seeding/coating the NPCs onto the surface of the polymerized collagen-based hepatic microtissues. The PHH microtissues coated with 3T3-J2 fibroblasts display stable liver functions (albumin shown here) for at least 6 weeks in vitro. Adapted with permission from Kukla et al., Gene Expression 20(1), 1 (2020). Copyright 2020 Author(s), licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license.
FIG. 4.Liver-on-a-chip (microfluidic) platforms. (a) Emulate's liver-chip containing two fluidic channels separated by a porous membrane; ECM sandwiched PHHs are seeded on one side of the membrane while endothelial cells are seeded on the other side. KCs and HSCs can be added optionally to the endothelial side. Right: bosentan toxicity to PHHs in the liver-chip (solid line) and in static ECM sandwiched PHHs (dashed line). Reprinted with permission from Jang et al., Sci. Transl. Med. 11(517), eaax5516 (2019). Copyright 2019 AAAS. (b) Mimetas' OrganoPlate with 96 individual chips with hepatocytes seeded in the static channel and human microvascular endothelial cells (HMVEC-1) and THP-1 (monocyte line that can be differentiated into macrophages) seeded in the perfusion channel. Cell presence was verified with F-actin and THP-1 presence was verified with CD68 staining. Reprinted with permission from Bircsak et al., Toxicology 450, 152667 (2021). Copyright 2021 Author(s), licensed under a Creative Commons (CC-BY) license. (c) Gut–liver platform allowing for the study of fatty acid metabolism. Reproduced with permission from Lee et al., Biotechnol. Bioeng. 115(11), 2817–2827 (2018). Copyright 2018 Wiley. (d) Pumpless microfluidic heart-liver platform with on-chip monitoring of cardiac electrical and mechanical variations. Two laser cut acrylic (top and bottom) layers sandwich two laser cut PDMS layers with PHHs cultured on glass coverslip in chamber 1 and cardiomyocytes cultured on the cantilever array (chamber 2) as well as on the multi-electrode array (MEA, chamber 3). Medium exchange is performed through reservoirs, R1 and R2. Reprinted with permission from Oleaga et al., Biomaterials 182, 176–190 (2018). Copyright 2018 Elsevier. (e) Multi-MPS platform allowing for seven interconnected organ systems; each organ model on a Transwell inset can be placed into the configurable device. Right: liver compartment can metabolize diclofenac into its main metabolite, 4-OH-DCF, over time. Reprinted with permission from Edington et al., Sci. Rep. 8(1), 4530 (2018). Copyright 2018 Author(s), licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license. (f) Multi-organ system containing small intestine (compartment 1 in schematic), liver (compartment 2), skin (compartment 3), and kidney (compartment 4) tissue models. The PDMS-glass chip in the device accommodates a surrogate blood flow circuit (pink) and excretory flow circuit (yellow) as also shown in the top view of the device (a–e indicates measurement spots in the flow circuits). Images on the right show microvilli formation (CK19 staining) in the intestine compartment and CYP3A4 in the liver compartment. Reprinted with permission from Maschmeyer et al., Lab Chip 15(12), 2688–2699 (2015). Copyright 2015 Author(s), licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 3.0) license.
Engineered platforms with applications in drug development.
| Model | Organ | Cells | Unique contribution | Validated applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MPCC—HepatoPac (BioIVT) | Liver | PHHs, iHeps, 3T3-J2 murine embryonic fibroblasts, LSECs, HSCs, and KCs | Maintains highly functional PHHs for up to 10 weeks and liver NPCs for up to 4 weeks in monolayer format and uses standard multi-well plates (up to 384-well format) | Drug toxicity, drug clearance, DDI, infection with HBV/HCV/malaria, and NAFLD modeling |
| 3D Insight™ spheroids (InSphero) | Liver | PHHs, LSECs, KCs, and HSCs | Maintains relatively stable gene and protein expression for over 35 days of 3D culture and requires fewer cells than other model systems | Drug toxicity and NAFLD modeling |
| Spheroids formed in ultra-low attachment plates (HepaPredict) | Liver | PHHs, KCs, HSCs, and biliary cells | Long-term 3D model and allows for spheroid size tuning | Drug toxicity, DDI, and NAFLD modeling |
| Liver-chip (Emulate) | Liver | PHHs, LSEC, KCs, and HSCs | Mimics liver architecture with porous membrane separating hepatocytes from NPCs, and two channels allow perfusion of PHHs and LSECs with different flow rates | Drug toxicity |
| LAMPs (NortisBio) | Liver | PHHs, HMVECs or LSECs, THP-1, and HSCs | Oxygen control via variable medium perfusion rates to model zones 1 and 3 liver phenotypes | Zone-specific drug toxicity |
| PREDICT-96 (Draper) | Liver | PHHs | One plate contains 96 two-channel microfluidic devices with a pump array | Drug toxicity |
| OrganoPlate (Mimetas) | Liver | iHeps, HMVECs, and THP-1 | 96-microfluidic devices in one chip allows for high-throughput screening, and compatible with commercial fluid handlers | Drug toxicity |
| InLiver-OC (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia) | Intestine, liver | Intestinal myofibroblasts, Caco-2, and HepG2 | Modeling of first pass metabolism allowing for sampling after each organ compartment and allows for alcohol to be included in system without evaporation | Alcoholic fatty liver disease modeling |
| Gastrointestinal (GI) tract–liver system (Cornell) | Intestine, liver | Immortalized human intestinal epithelial cells, intestinal myofibroblasts, and HepG2 C3A | Retains major cell types of intestinal epithelium, tight junction formation in the intestinal layer of device with sustained TEER permeability values, and maintenance of intestine and liver CYP activity | Intestinal absorption characteristics |
| Heart–liver MPS (Hesperos) | Heart, liver | iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes and PHHs | Real-time monitoring of cardiomyocyte electrical and mechanical changes, and allows assessment of the effect of liver drug metabolism on cardiomyocytes | Drug metabolism, toxicity, and drug effects on electrical parameters of cardiomyocytes |
| Multi-organ chip (UC-Berkeley) | Heart, liver | iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes and PHHs | All cell types derived from the same iPSC line | Drug uptake/efflux, metabolism, toxicity, and drug effects on electrical parameters of cardiomyocytes |
| MPS (Draper) | Liver, intestine, kidney | PHHs, endothelial cells, intestinal epithelial cells, and renal proximal tubule epithelial cells | 96 microfluidic devices in a plate format, integrated pumps, and TEER measurement system in plate lid, and embedded oxygen sensors | Shear stress effects on cell phenotype, cell layer permeability, and renal transport |
| MPS (Draper) | Up to 12 tissue types | Various | Reconfigurable per end user's requirement and utilizes electromagnetic actuation | Multi-organ toxicity |
| MPS (CN-Bio) | Up to 4, 7, or 10 tissue types | Various | Reconfigurable per user's requirements and customized chambers for physiologic fluid flow | Multi-organ toxicity, drug distribution |
Major functions of different liver cell types that can be measured within engineered devices.
| Hepatocyte functions (method) | LSEC functions (method) | KC functions (method) | HSC functions (method) |
|---|---|---|---|
| • | • Factor VIII secretion (ELISA) | • Tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin-6 secretion following 24-h stimulation with lipopolysaccharide (ELISA) | • Lipid/vitamin A droplets (fluorescent stain)—indicates quiescent phenotype |
| • | • | • Phagocytosis (fluorescent bioparticle assay) | • |
| • | • Fenestrae in sinusoidal endothelial cells (scanning electron microscopy) | • | |
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