Li Cheri Y, Stevens Kelly R, Schwartz Robert E, Alejandro Brian S, Huang Joanne H, Bhatia Sangeeta N
1 Department of Chemical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Tissue Eng Part A. 2014 Aug;20(15-16):2200-12. doi: 10.1089/ten.tea.2013.0667. Epub 2014 Apr 28.
Drug-induced liver injury is a major cause of drug development failures and postmarket withdrawals. In vitro models that incorporate primary hepatocytes have been shown to be more predictive than model systems which rely on liver microsomes or hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines. Methods to phenotypically stabilize primary hepatocytes ex vivo often rely on mimicry of hepatic microenvironmental cues such as cell-cell interactions and cell-matrix interactions. In this work, we sought to incorporate phenotypically stable hepatocytes into three-dimensional (3D) microtissues, which, in turn, could be deployed in drug-screening platforms such as multiwell plates and diverse organ-on-a-chip devices. We first utilize micropatterning on collagen I to specify cell-cell interactions in two-dimensions, followed by collagenase digestion to produce well-controlled aggregates for 3D encapsulation in polyethylene glycol (PEG) diacrylate. Using this approach, we examined the influence of homotypic hepatocyte interactions and composition of the encapsulating hydrogel, and achieved the maintenance of liver-specific function for over 50 days. Optimally preaggregated structures were subsequently encapsulated using a microfluidic droplet-generator to produce 3D microtissues. Interactions of engineered hepatic microtissues with drugs was characterized by flow cytometry, and yielded both induction of P450 enzymes in response to prototypic small molecules and drug-drug interactions that give rise to hepatotoxicity. Collectively, this study establishes a pipeline for the manufacturing of 3D hepatic microtissues that exhibit stabilized liver-specific functions and can be incorporated into a wide array of emerging drug development platforms.
药物性肝损伤是药物研发失败和上市后撤市的主要原因。已证明,包含原代肝细胞的体外模型比依赖肝微粒体或肝癌细胞系的模型系统更具预测性。在体外对原代肝细胞进行表型稳定的方法通常依赖于模拟肝脏微环境线索,如细胞间相互作用和细胞与基质的相互作用。在这项研究中,我们试图将表型稳定的肝细胞整合到三维(3D)微组织中,进而将其应用于药物筛选平台,如多孔板和各种芯片器官装置。我们首先在I型胶原上进行微图案化,以在二维上确定细胞间相互作用,然后通过胶原酶消化产生可控的聚集体,用于在聚乙二醇(PEG)二丙烯酸酯中进行3D封装。使用这种方法,我们研究了同型肝细胞相互作用和封装水凝胶组成的影响,并实现了肝脏特异性功能维持超过50天。随后使用微流控液滴发生器对最佳预聚集结构进行封装,以产生3D微组织。通过流式细胞术对工程化肝脏微组织与药物的相互作用进行了表征,结果显示,原型小分子可诱导P450酶,并且药物之间的相互作用会导致肝毒性。总的来说,这项研究建立了一条用于制造3D肝脏微组织的流程,这些微组织具有稳定的肝脏特异性功能,可整合到各种新兴的药物研发平台中。