Back to Search Start Over

Development of a human liver microphysiological coculture system for higher throughput chemical safety assessment.

Authors :
Ip, Blanche C
Madnick, Samantha J
Zheng, Sophia
Tongeren, Tessa C A van
Hall, Susan J
Li, Hui
Martin, Suzanne
Spriggs, Sandrine
Carmichael, Paul
Chen, Wei
Ames, David
Breitweiser, Lori A
Pence, Heather E
Bowling, Andrew J
Johnson, Kamin J
Cubberley, Richard
Morgan, Jeffrey R
Boekelheide, Kim
Source :
Toxicological Sciences. Jun2024, Vol. 199 Issue 2, p227-245. 19p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Chemicals in the systemic circulation can undergo hepatic xenobiotic metabolism, generate metabolites, and exhibit altered toxicity compared with their parent compounds. This article describes a 2-chamber liver-organ coculture model in a higher-throughput 96-well format for the determination of toxicity on target tissues in the presence of physiologically relevant human liver metabolism. This 2-chamber system is a hydrogel formed within each well consisting of a central well (target tissue) and an outer ring-shaped trough (human liver tissue). The target tissue chamber can be configured to accommodate a three-dimensional (3D) spheroid-shaped microtissue, or a 2-dimensional (2D) cell monolayer. Culture medium and compounds freely diffuse between the 2 chambers. Human-differentiated HepaRG liver cells are used to form the 3D human liver microtissues, which displayed robust protein expression of liver biomarkers (albumin, asialoglycoprotein receptor, Phase I cytochrome P450 [CYP3A4] enzyme, multidrug resistance-associated protein 2 transporter, and glycogen), and exhibited Phase I/II enzyme activities over the course of 17 days. Histological and ultrastructural analyses confirmed that the HepaRG microtissues presented a differentiated hepatocyte phenotype, including abundant mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, and bile canaliculi. Liver microtissue zonation characteristics could be easily modulated by maturation in different media supplements. Furthermore, our proof-of-concept study demonstrated the efficacy of this coculture model in evaluating testosterone-mediated androgen receptor responses in the presence of human liver metabolism. This liver-organ coculture system provides a practical, higher-throughput testing platform for metabolism-dependent bioactivity assessment of drugs/chemicals to better recapitulate the biological effects and potential toxicity of human exposures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10966080
Volume :
199
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Toxicological Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177516909
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/toxsci/kfae018