Novel Microphysiological Multi-Organ Systems for Studies of Human Metabolic Diseases in Drug Discovery
Tommy Andersson, Senior Principal Scientist, Professor, AstraZeneca Research and Development Molndal
Currently used pre-clinical models often suffer from poor translation of
drug responses to the patient due to the limited knowledge gained in
the efficiency and mode of action of the drug candidate. This
contributes to high attrition rates in early clinical programs. Multi
organ-on-a-chip emulating human physiology have the possibility to
improve success rate by mimicking the human disease state and improve
selection of the right targets and compounds early in drug discovery.
Such models will not only improve translation to patients but also
reduce time spent in early clinical programs as well as reducing the
needs for animal models. We developed a human liver - pancreatic islets
chip model. The model allows cross talk between cells from both organs
in a fluidic system and responds in a physiological way to glucose load
by increased insulin secretion leading to increased glucose consumption
(figure). Initial studies indicate that the model can become insulin
resistant and thus can be used as a metabolic disease model. Ongoing
studies are investigating how insulin resistance in liver cells effects
islet function by using the insulin receptor antagonists.
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