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Human iPSC-based Cardiac Microphysiological System For Drug Screening Applications.

Authors :
Mathur, Anurag
Loskill, Peter
Shao, Kaifeng
Huebsch, Nathaniel
Hong, SoonGweon
Marcus, Sivan G.
Marks, Natalie
Mandegar, Mohammad
Conklin, Bruce R.
Lee, Luke P.
Healy, Kevin E.
Source :
Scientific Reports. 3/13/2015, p8883. 1p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Drug discovery and development are hampered by high failure rates attributed to the reliance on non-human animal models employed during safety and efficacy testing. A fundamental problem in this inefficient process is that non-human animal models cannot adequately represent human biology. Thus, there is an urgent need for high-content in vitro systems that can better predict drug-induced toxicity. Systems that predict cardiotoxicity are of uppermost significance, as approximately one third of safety-based pharmaceutical withdrawals are due to cardiotoxicty. Here, we present a cardiac microphysiological system (MPS) with the attributes required for an ideal in vitro system to predict cardiotoxicity: i) cells with a human genetic background; ii) physiologically relevant tissue structure (e.g. aligned cells); iii) computationally predictable perfusion mimicking human vasculature; and, iv) multiple modes of analysis (e.g. biological, electrophysiological, and physiological). Our MPS is able to keep human induced pluripotent stem cell derived cardiac tissue viable and functional over multiple weeks. Pharmacological studies using the cardiac MPS show half maximal inhibitory/effective concentration values (IC50/EC50) that are more consistent with the data on tissue scale references compared to cellular scale studies. We anticipate the widespread adoption of MPSs for drug screening and disease modeling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
101684540
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/srep08883