Grainger Alastair I, King Marianne C, Nagel David A, Parri H Rheinallt, Coleman Michael D, Hill Eric J
Life and Health Sciences, Aston University, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Front Neurosci. 2018 Aug 31;12:590. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2018.00590. eCollection 2018.
The brain is the most complex organ in the body, controlling our highest functions, as well as regulating myriad processes which incorporate the entire physiological system. The effects of prospective therapeutic entities on the brain and central nervous system (CNS) may potentially cause significant injury, hence, CNS toxicity testing forms part of the "core battery" of safety pharmacology studies. Drug-induced seizure is a major reason for compound attrition during drug development. Currently, the rat hippocampal slice assay is the standard option for seizure-liability studies, followed by primary rodent cultures. These models can respond to diverse agents and predict seizure outcome, yet controversy over the relevance, efficacy, and cost of these animal-based methods has led to interest in the development of human-derived models. Existing platforms often utilize rodents, and so lack human receptors and other drug targets, which may produce misleading data, with difficulties in inter-species extrapolation. Current electrophysiological approaches are typically used in a low-throughput capacity and network function may be overlooked. Human-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are a promising avenue for neurotoxicity testing, increasingly utilized in drug screening and disease modeling. Furthermore, the combination of iPSC-derived models with functional techniques such as multi-electrode array (MEA) analysis can provide information on neuronal network function, with increased sensitivity to neurotoxic effects which disrupt different pathways. The use of an human iPSC-derived neural model for neurotoxicity studies, combined with high-throughput techniques such as MEA recordings, could be a suitable addition to existing pre-clinical seizure-liability testing strategies.
大脑是人体最复杂的器官,控制着我们的高级功能,并调节着涉及整个生理系统的无数过程。潜在治疗实体对大脑和中枢神经系统(CNS)的影响可能会造成重大损伤,因此,CNS毒性测试是安全药理学研究“核心试验组”的一部分。药物诱发的癫痫发作是药物研发过程中化合物淘汰的主要原因。目前,大鼠海马切片试验是癫痫易感性研究的标准选择,其次是原代啮齿动物培养。这些模型可以对多种药物作出反应并预测癫痫发作结果,但对于这些基于动物的方法的相关性、有效性和成本存在争议,这引发了人们对开发人源模型的兴趣。现有的平台通常使用啮齿动物,因此缺乏人类受体和其他药物靶点,这可能会产生误导性数据,且难以进行种间外推。目前的电生理方法通常以低通量进行,可能会忽略网络功能。人源诱导多能干细胞(iPSC)是神经毒性测试的一个有前景的途径,越来越多地用于药物筛选和疾病建模。此外,iPSC衍生模型与多电极阵列(MEA)分析等功能技术相结合,可以提供有关神经网络功能的信息,对破坏不同途径的神经毒性作用的敏感性增加。将人iPSC衍生的神经模型用于神经毒性研究,并结合MEA记录等高通量技术,可能是现有临床前癫痫易感性测试策略的合适补充。