Alexander Peter G, Clark Karen L, Tuan Rocky S
Peter G. Alexander, Karen L. Clark, and Rocky S. Tuan are from Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Center for Cellular and Molecular Engineering, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Birth Defects Res C Embryo Today. 2016 Sep;108(3):243-273. doi: 10.1002/bdrc.21140. Epub 2016 Oct 21.
Limb congenital defects afflict approximately 0.6:1000 live births. In addition to genetic factors, prenatal exposure to drugs and environmental toxicants, represents a major contributing factor to limb defects. Examples of well-recognized limb teratogenic agents include thalidomide, warfarin, valproic acid, misoprostol, and phenytoin. While the mechanism by which these agents cause dymorphogenesis is increasingly clear, prediction of the limb teratogenicity of many thousands of as yet uncharacterized environmental factors (pollutants) remains inexact. This is limited by the insufficiencies of currently available models. Specifically, in vivo approaches using guideline animal models have inherently deficient predictive power due to genomic and anatomic differences that complicate mechanistic comparisons. On the other hand, in vitro two-dimensional (2D) cell cultures, while accessible for cellular and molecular experimentation, do not reflect the three-dimensional (3D) morphogenetic events in vivo nor systemic influences. More robust and accessible models based on human cells that accurately replicate specific processes of embryonic limb development are needed to enhance limb teratogenesis prediction and to permit mechanistic analysis of the adverse outcome pathways. Recent advances in elucidating mechanisms of normal development will aid in the development of process-specific 3D cell cultures within specialized bioreactors to support multicellular microtissues or organoid constructs that will lead to increased understanding of cell functions, cell-to-cell signaling, pathway networks, and mechanisms of toxicity. The promise is prompting researchers to look to such 3D microphysiological systems to help sort out complex and often subtle interactions relevant to developmental malformations that would not be evident by standard 2D cell culture testing. Birth Defects Research (Part C) 108:243-273, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
肢体先天性缺陷影响约0.6:1000的活产儿。除遗传因素外,产前接触药物和环境毒物是导致肢体缺陷的主要因素。公认的肢体致畸剂包括沙利度胺、华法林、丙戊酸、米索前列醇和苯妥英钠。虽然这些药物导致畸形发生的机制越来越清楚,但对数千种尚未明确的环境因素(污染物)的肢体致畸性预测仍不准确。这受到现有模型不足的限制。具体而言,使用标准动物模型的体内方法由于基因组和解剖学差异而具有内在的预测能力不足,这使得机制比较变得复杂。另一方面,体外二维(2D)细胞培养虽然便于进行细胞和分子实验,但不能反映体内的三维(3D)形态发生事件和全身影响。需要基于人类细胞的更强大且易于使用的模型,以准确复制胚胎肢体发育的特定过程,从而加强肢体致畸性预测,并允许对不良结局途径进行机制分析。阐明正常发育机制的最新进展将有助于在专门的生物反应器中开发特定过程的3D细胞培养物,以支持多细胞微组织或类器官构建体,这将有助于加深对细胞功能、细胞间信号传导、通路网络和毒性机制的理解。这一前景促使研究人员寻求此类3D微生理系统,以帮助梳理与发育畸形相关的复杂且往往微妙的相互作用,而这些相互作用在标准的2D细胞培养测试中并不明显。《出生缺陷研究》(C部分)108:243 - 273,2016年。© 2016威利期刊公司