In Vitro Life Science Laboratories, Bratislava, Slovak Republic.
MatTek Corporation, Ashland, MA, USA.
In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim. 2021 Feb;57(2):160-173. doi: 10.1007/s11626-020-00526-6. Epub 2020 Nov 25.
The gastrointestinal tract (GIT), in particular, the small intestine, plays a significant role in food digestion, fluid and electrolyte transport, drug absorption and metabolism, and nutrient uptake. As the longest portion of the GIT, the small intestine also plays a vital role in protecting the host against pathogenic or opportunistic microbial invasion. However, establishing polarized intestinal tissue models in vitro that reflect the architecture and physiology of the gut has been a challenge for decades and the lack of translational models that predict human responses has impeded research in the drug absorption, metabolism, and drug-induced gastrointestinal toxicity space. Often, animals fail to recapitulate human physiology and do not predict human outcomes. Also, certain human pathogens are species specific and do not infect other hosts. Concerns such as variability of results, a low throughput format, and ethical considerations further complicate the use of animals for predicting the safety and efficacy xenobiotics in humans. These limitations necessitate the development of in vitro 3D human intestinal tissue models that recapitulate in vivo-like microenvironment and provide more physiologically relevant cellular responses so that they can better predict the safety and efficacy of pharmaceuticals and toxicants. Over the past decade, much progress has been made in the development of in vitro intestinal models (organoids and 3D-organotypic tissues) using either inducible pluripotent or adult stem cells. Among the models, the MatTek's intestinal tissue model (EpiIntestinal™ Ashland, MA) has been used extensively by the pharmaceutical industry to study drug permeation, metabolism, drug-induced GI toxicity, pathogen infections, inflammation, wound healing, and as a predictive model for a clinical adverse outcome (diarrhea) to pharmaceutical drugs. In this paper, our review will focus on the potential of in vitro small intestinal tissues as preclinical research tool and as alternative to the use of animals.
胃肠道(GIT),特别是小肠,在食物消化、液体和电解质转运、药物吸收和代谢以及营养吸收方面发挥着重要作用。作为 GIT 最长的部分,小肠在保护宿主免受致病或机会性微生物入侵方面也起着至关重要的作用。然而,几十年来,在体外建立反映肠道结构和生理学的极化肠道组织模型一直是一个挑战,缺乏能够预测人类反应的转化模型,这阻碍了药物吸收、代谢和药物引起的胃肠道毒性领域的研究。通常,动物无法重现人类生理学,也无法预测人类结果。此外,某些人类病原体是特定于物种的,不会感染其他宿主。结果的可变性、低通量格式以及伦理考虑等问题进一步使动物在预测人类安全性和功效方面的应用复杂化。这些局限性需要开发能够重现体内样微环境并提供更具生理相关性的细胞反应的体外 3D 人类肠道组织模型,以便更好地预测药物和毒物的安全性和功效。在过去的十年中,使用诱导多能或成体干细胞开发体外肠道模型(类器官和 3D 器官型组织)方面取得了很大进展。在这些模型中,MatTek 的肠道组织模型(EpiIntestinal ™ Ashland,MA)已被制药行业广泛用于研究药物渗透、代谢、药物引起的胃肠道毒性、病原体感染、炎症、伤口愈合以及作为预测药物临床不良后果(腹泻)的模型。在本文中,我们的综述将重点介绍体外小肠组织作为临床前研究工具的潜力以及替代动物使用的潜力。