Peters Matthew F, Choy Allison L, Pin Carmen, Leishman Derek J, Moisan Annie, Ewart Lorna, Guzzie-Peck Peggy J, Sura Radhakrishna, Keller Douglas A, Scott Clay W, Kolaja Kyle L
Clinical Pharmacology and Safety Sciences, BioPharmaceuticals R&D, AstraZeneca, Boston, USA.
Lab Chip. 2020 Apr 7;20(7):1177-1190. doi: 10.1039/c9lc01107b. Epub 2020 Mar 4.
Drug-induced gastrointestinal toxicities (DI-GITs) are among the most common adverse events in clinical trials. High prevalence of DI-GIT has persisted among new drugs due in part to the lack of robust experimental tools to allow early detection or to guide optimization of safer molecules. Developing in vitro assays for the leading GI toxicities (nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, constipation, and abdominal pain) will likely involve recapitulating complex physiological properties that require contributions from diverse cell/tissue types including epithelial, immune, microbiome, nerve, and muscle. While this stipulation may be beyond traditional 2D monocultures of intestinal cell lines, emerging 3D GI microtissues capture interactions between diverse cell and tissue types. These interactions give rise to microphysiologies fundamental to gut biology. For GI microtissues, organoid technology was the breakthrough that introduced intestinal stem cells with the capability of differentiating into each of the epithelial cell types and that self-organize into a multi-cellular tissue proxy with villus- and crypt-like domains. Recently, GI microtissues generated using miniaturized devices with microfluidic flow and cyclic peristaltic strain were shown to induce Caco2 cells to spontaneously differentiate into each of the principle intestinal epithelial cell types. Second generation models comprised of epithelial organoids or microtissues co-cultured with non-epithelial cell types can successfully reproduce cross-'tissue' functional interactions broadening the potential of these models to accurately study drug-induced toxicities. A new paradigm in which in vitro assays become an early part of GI safety assessment could be realized if microphysiological systems (MPS) are developed in alignment with drug-discovery needs. Herein, approaches for assessing GI toxicity of pharmaceuticals are reviewed and gaps are compared with capabilities of emerging GI microtissues (e.g., organoids, organ-on-a-chip, transwell systems) in order to provide perspective on the assay features needed for MPS models to be adopted for DI-GIT assessment.
药物性胃肠道毒性(DI-GITs)是临床试验中最常见的不良事件之一。DI-GIT在新药中普遍存在,部分原因是缺乏强大的实验工具来进行早期检测或指导更安全分子的优化。开发针对主要胃肠道毒性(恶心、呕吐、腹泻、便秘和腹痛)的体外检测方法可能需要重现复杂的生理特性,这需要多种细胞/组织类型的参与,包括上皮细胞、免疫细胞、微生物群、神经细胞和肌肉细胞。虽然这一要求可能超出了传统肠道细胞系的二维单培养,但新兴的三维胃肠道微组织能够捕捉不同细胞和组织类型之间的相互作用。这些相互作用产生了肠道生物学的基本微生理学。对于胃肠道微组织,类器官技术是一项突破,它引入了能够分化为每种上皮细胞类型并能自组织成具有绒毛样和隐窝样结构域的多细胞组织替代物的肠道干细胞。最近,使用具有微流体流动和周期性蠕动应变的小型化设备生成的胃肠道微组织被证明能诱导Caco2细胞自发分化为每种主要的肠道上皮细胞类型。由上皮类器官或微组织与非上皮细胞类型共培养组成的第二代模型能够成功重现跨“组织”的功能相互作用,拓宽了这些模型准确研究药物诱导毒性的潜力。如果微生理系统(MPS)能够根据药物发现需求进行开发,那么体外检测成为胃肠道安全性评估早期部分的新范式就有可能实现。本文综述了评估药物胃肠道毒性的方法,并将其差距与新兴胃肠道微组织(如类器官、芯片器官、Transwell系统)的能力进行了比较,以便为MPS模型用于DI-GIT评估所需的检测特征提供参考。