摘要:
Animal models such as rats and primates provide body-wide information for drug and metabolite responses, including organ-specific toxicity and any unforeseen side effects on other organs. Although effective in the drug-screening process, their translatability to humans is limited because of the lack of high concordance and correlation among enzymatic mechanisms, cellular mechanisms, and resulting toxicities. A significant mode of failure for safety prediction in drug screening is hepatotoxicity, resulting in similar to 30% of all safety-related drug failures and withdrawals from the market. The liver is a multifunctional organ with diverse metabolic, secretory, and inflammatory response roles and is essential for maintaining key body functions. Conventional cell culture platforms (such as multiwell plate cultures) and metabolic enzyme systems (microsomes, cytochrome P450 enzymes) have been routinely used to assess drug pharmacokinetics and metabolism. However, current in vitro models often fail to recapitulate the complexity and dynamic nature of human tissues, imposing a heavy reliance on in vivo testing using preclinical species that have metabolic processes, disease mechanisms, and modes of toxicity distinct from humans. Recently, microphysiological systems (MPS) have gained attention as powerful tools with the potential to generate human-relevant information that can supplant and fill the gap of knowledge between preclinical animal models and simpler, conventional in vitro cell culture systems. Developments in microfabrication technologies for generating complex microfluidic systems, along with the ability to establish and maintain multicellularmodels to capture dynamic, human-relevant behavior, have provided new avenues to generate such physiologically relevant systems. These MPS platforms, when designed and developed with in vivo-derived design parameters, have the potential to capture key aspects and better mimic organ functionality. In this review, we discus