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  4. Chip-based human liver-intestine and liver-skin co-cultures
 
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2015
Journal Article
Title

Chip-based human liver-intestine and liver-skin co-cultures

Title Supplement
A first step toward systemic repeated dose substance testing in vitro
Abstract
Systemic repeated dose safety assessment and systemic efficacy evaluation of substances are currently carried out on laboratory animals and in humans due to the lack of predictive alternatives. Relevant international regulations, such as OECD and ICH guidelines, demand long-term testing and oral, dermal, inhalation, and systemic exposure routes for such evaluations. So-called ""human-on-a-chip"" concepts are aiming to replace respective animals and humans in substance evaluation with miniaturized functional human organisms. The major technical hurdle toward success in this field is the life-like combination of human barrier organ models, such as intestine, lung or skin, with parenchymal organ equivalents, such as liver, at the smallest biologically acceptable scale. Here, we report on a reproducible homeostatic long-term co-culture of human liver equivalents with either a reconstructed human intestinal barrier model or a human skin biopsy applying a microphysiological system. We used a multi-organ chip (MOC) platform, which provides pulsatile fluid flow within physiological ranges at low media-to-tissue ratios. The MOC supports submerse cultivation of an intact intestinal barrier model and an air-liquid interface for the skin model during their co-culture with the liver equivalents respectively at 1/100.000 the scale of their human counterparts in vivo. To increase the degree of organismal emulation, microfluidic channels of the liver-skin co-culture could be successfully covered with human endothelial cells, thus mimicking human vasculature, for the first time. Finally, exposure routes emulating oral and systemic administration in humans have been qualified by applying a repeated dose administration of a model substance - troglitazone - to the chip-based co-cultures.
Author(s)
Maschmeyer, Ilka
TissUse GmbH
Hasenberg, Tobias
TU Berlin, Institut für Biotechnologie
Jaenicke, Annika
TU Berlin, Institut für Biotechnologie
Lindner, Marcus
TU Berlin, Institut für Biotechnologie
Lorenz, Alexandra Katharina
TU Berlin, Institut für Biotechnologie
Zech, Julie
TU Berlin, Institut für Biotechnologie
Garbe, Leif Alexander
TU Berlin, Institut für Biotechnologie
Sonntag, Frank  orcid-logo
Fraunhofer-Institut für Werkstoff- und Strahltechnik IWS  
Hayden, Patrick J.
MatTek Corporation, Ashland
Ayehunie, Seyoum
MatTek Corporation, Ashland
Lauster, Roland
TU Berlin, Institut für Biotechnologie
Marx, Uwe
TissUse GmbH
Materne, Eva Maria
TU Berlin, Institut für Biotechnologie
Journal
European journal of pharmaceutics and biopharmaceutics  
Open Access
DOI
10.1016/j.ejpb.2015.03.002
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Werkstoff- und Strahltechnik IWS  
Keyword(s)
  • 3D tissue culture

  • alternatives to animal testing

  • human barrier models

  • human-on-a-chip

  • intestine model

  • microphysiological system

  • organ-on-a-chip

  • skin equivalent

  • vasculature

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