4.4 Review

Circadian hormone control in a human-on-a-chip: In vitro biology's ignored component?

期刊

EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
卷 242, 期 17, 页码 1714-1731

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1535370217732766

关键词

organs-on-chips; diurnal rhythms; microformulator; pharmacology; toxicology; endocrine

资金

  1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [5UH3TR000491, 5UH3TR000503, 5UH3TR000504, HHSN271201600009C]
  2. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Assistance Agreement [83573601]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Organs-on-Chips (OoCs) are poised to reshape dramatically the study of biology by replicating in vivo the function of individual and coupled human organs. Such microphysiological systems (MPS) have already recreated complex physiological responses necessary to simulate human organ function not evident in two-dimensional in vitro biological experiments. OoC researchers hope to streamline pharmaceutical development, accelerate toxicology studies, limit animal testing, and provide new insights beyond the capability of current biological models. However, to develop a physiologically accurate Human-on-a-Chip, i.e., an MPS homunculus that functions as an interconnected, whole-body, model organ system, one must couple individual OoCs with proper fluidic and metabolic scaling. This will enable the study of the effects of organ-organ interactions on the metabolism of drugs and toxins. Critical to these efforts will be the recapitulation of the complex physiological signals that regulate the endocrine, metabolic, and digestive systems. To date, with the exception of research focused on reproductive organs on chips, most OoC research ignores homuncular endocrine regulation, in particular the circadian rhythms that modulate the function of all organ systems. We outline the importance of cyclic endocrine regulation and the role that it may play in the development of MPS homunculi for the pharmacology, toxicology, and systems biology communities. Moreover, we discuss the critical end-organ hormone interactions that are most relevant for a typical coupled-OoC system, and the possible research applications of a missing endocrine system MicroFormulator (MES-mu F) that could impose biological rhythms on in vitro models. By linking OoCs together through chemical messenger systems, advanced physiological phenomena relevant to pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics studies can be replicated. The concept of a MES-mu F could be applied to other standard cell-culture systems such as well plates, thereby extending the concept of circadian hormonal regulation to much of in vitro biology.

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