• Plug-and-play organ-on-a-chip can be cus

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Wed Apr 27 22:30:48 2022
    Plug-and-play organ-on-a-chip can be customized to the patient

    Date:
    April 27, 2022
    Source:
    Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science
    Summary:
    Researchers have developed a model of human physiology in the form
    of a multi-organ chip consisting of engineered human heart, bone,
    liver, and skin that are linked by vascular flow with circulating
    immune cells, to allow recapitulation of interdependent organ
    functions. The researchers have essentially created a plug-and-play
    multi-organ chip, which is the size of a microscope slide, that
    can be customized to the patient.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Engineered tissues have become a critical component for modeling
    diseases and testing the efficacy and safety of drugs in a human
    context. A major challenge for researchers has been how to model body
    functions and systemic diseases with multiple engineered tissues that can physiologically communicate -- just like they do in the body. However, it
    is essential to provide each engineered tissue with its own environment so
    that the specific tissue phenotypes can be maintained for weeks to months,
    as required for biological and biomedical studies. Making the challenge
    even more complex is the necessity of linking the tissue modules together
    to facilitate their physiological communication, which is required for
    modeling conditions that involve more than one organ system, without sacrificing the individual engineered tissue environments.


    ========================================================================== Novel plug-and-play multi-organ chip, customized to the patient Up to now,
    no one has been able to meet both conditions. Today, a team of researchers
    from Columbia Engineering and Columbia University Irving Medical Center
    reports that they have developed a model of human physiology in the
    form of a multi-organ chip consisting of engineered human heart, bone,
    liver, and skin that are linked by vascular flow with circulating immune
    cells, to allow recapitulation of interdependent organ functions. The researchers have essentially created a plug-and-play multi-organ chip,
    which is the size of a microscope slide, that can be customized to the
    patient. Because disease progression and responses to treatment vary
    greatly from one person to another, such a chip will eventually enable personalized optimization of therapy for each patient. The study is the
    cover story of the April 2022 issue of Nature Biomedical Engineering.

    "This is a huge achievement for us -- we've spent ten years running
    hundreds of experiments, exploring innumerable great ideas, and building
    many prototypes, and now at last we've developed this platform that successfully captures the biology of organ interactions in the body,"
    said the project leader Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic, University Professor
    and the Mikati Foundation Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Medical Sciences, and Dental Medicine.

    Inspired by the human body Taking inspiration from how the human
    body works, the team has built a human tissue-chip system in which
    they linked matured heart, liver, bone, and skin tissue modules by recirculating vascular flow, allowing for interdependent organs to
    communicate just as they do in the human body. The researchers chose
    these tissues because they have distinctly different embryonic origins, structural and functional properties, and are adversely affected by cancer treatment drugs, presenting a rigorous test of the proposed approach.



    ========================================================================== "Providing communication between tissues while preserving their
    individual phenotypes has been a major challenge," said Kacey Ronaldson-Bouchard, the study's lead author and an associate research
    scientist in Vunjak-Novakovic's Laboratory for Stem Cells and Tissue Engineering. "Because we focus on using patient-derived tissue models
    we must individually mature each tissue so that it functions in a way
    that mimics responses you would see in the patient, and we don't want to sacrifice this advanced functionality when connecting multiple tissues. In
    the body, each organ maintains its own environment, while interacting with other organs by vascular flow carrying circulating cells and bioactive
    factors. So we chose to connect the tissues by vascular circulation,
    while preserving each individual tissue niche that is necessary to
    maintain its biological fidelity, mimicking the way that our organs are connected within the body. " Optimized tissue modules can be maintained
    for more than a month The group created tissue modules, each within its optimized environment and separated them from the common vascular flow
    by a selectively permeable endothelial barrier. The individual tissue environments were able to communicate across the endothelial barriers
    and via vascular circulation. The researchers also introduced into the
    vascular circulation the monocytes giving rise to macrophages, because of
    their important roles in directing tissue responses to injury, disease,
    and therapeutic outcomes.

    All tissues were derived from the same line of human induced pluripotent
    stem cells (iPSC), obtained from a small sample of blood, in order to demonstrate the ability for individualized, patient-specific studies. And,
    to prove the model can be used for long-term studies, the team maintained
    the tissues, which had already been grown and matured for four to six
    weeks, for an additional four weeks, after they were linked by vascular perfusion.

    Using the model to study anticancer drugs The researchers also wanted
    to demonstrate how the model could be used for studies of an important
    systemic condition in a human context and chose to examine the adverse
    effects of anticancer drugs. They investigated the effects of doxorubicin
    -- a broadly used anticancer drug -- on heart, liver, bone, skin, and vasculature. They showed that the measured effects recapitulated those
    reported from clinical studies of cancer therapy using the same drug.



    ==========================================================================
    The team developed in parallel a novel computational model of the
    multi-organ chip for mathematical simulations of drug's absorption, distribution, metabolism, and secretion. This model correctly predicted doxorubicin's metabolism into doxorubicinol and its diffusion into
    the chip. The combination of the multi-organ chip with computational methodology in future studies of pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics
    of other drugs provides an improved basis for preclinical to clinical extrapolation, with improvements in the drug development pipeline.

    "While doing that, we were also able to identify some early molecular
    markers of cardiotoxicity, the main side-effect that limits the broad
    use of the drug.Most notably, the multi-organ chip predicted precisely
    the cardiotoxicity and cardiomyopathy that often require clinicians to
    decrease therapeutic dosages of doxorubicin or even to stop the therapy,"
    said Vunjak-Novakovic.

    Collaborations across the university The development of the
    multi-organ chip began from a platform with the heart, liver,
    and vasculature, nicknamed the HeLiVa platform. As is always the
    case with Vunjak-Novakovic's biomedical research, collaborations
    were critical for completing the work. These include the collective
    talent of her laboratory, Andrea Califano and his systems biology team (Columbia University), Christopher S. Chen (Boston University) and Karen
    K. Hirschi (University of Virginia) with their expertise in vascular
    biology and engineering, Angela M. Christiano and her skin research team (Columbia University), Rajesh K. Soni of the Proteomics Core at Columbia University, and the computational modeling support of the team at CFD
    Research Corporation.

    A multitude of applications, allin individualized patient-specific
    contexts The research team is currently using variations of this chip
    to study, all in individualized patient-specific contexts: breast cancer metastasis; prostate cancer metastasis; leukemia; effects of radiation on
    human tissues; the effects of SARS-CoV-2 on heart, lung, and vasculature;
    the effects of ischemia on the heart and brain; and the safety and effectiveness of drugs. The group is also developing a user-friendly standardized chip for both academic and clinical laboratories, to help
    utilize its full potential for advancing biological and medical studies.

    Vunjak-Novakovic added, "After ten years of research on organs-on-chips,
    we still find it amazing that we can model a patient's physiology by
    connecting millimeter sized tissues -- the beating heart muscle, the metabolizing liver, and the functioning skin and bone that are grown
    from the patient's cells. We are excited about the potential of this
    approach. It's uniquely designed for studies of systemic conditions
    associated with injury or disease, and will enable us to maintain the biological properties of engineered human tissues along with their communication. One patient at a time, from inflammation to cancer!"

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Columbia_University_School_of_Engineering_and_Applied Science. Original
    written by Holly Evarts. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Related Multimedia:
    * The_new_multi-organ_chip ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Kacey Ronaldson-Bouchard, Diogo Teles, Keith Yeager, Daniel Naveed
    Tavakol, Yimu Zhao, Alan Chramiec, Somnath Tagore, Max Summers,
    Sophia Stylianos, Manuel Tamargo, Busub Marcus Lee, Susan
    P. Halligan, Erbil Hasan Abaci, Zongyou Guo, Joanna Jacko'w,
    Alberto Pappalardo, Jerry Shih, Rajesh K. Soni, Shivam Sonar,
    Carrie German, Angela M. Christiano, Andrea Califano, Karen
    K. Hirschi, Christopher S. Chen, Andrzej Przekwas, Gordana
    Vunjak-Novakovic. A multi-organ chip with matured tissue niches
    linked by vascular flow. Nature Biomedical Engineering, 2022; 6
    (4): 351 DOI: 10.1038/s41551-022-00882-6 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/04/220427115732.htm

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