Intestine on a Chip for Basic Biology and Patient-Specific Medicine
Nancy L Allbritton, Professor, University Of North Carolina
Technical advances are making it possible to create tissue
microenvironments on platforms that are compatible with high-content
screening strategies. We have developed microfabricated devices to
enable culture of organized cellular structures which possess much of
the complexity and function of intact intestinal tissue. Stem-cell
culture enables single stem cells or intestinal crypts isolated from
primary small or large intestine from humans or mice to grow and persist
indefinitely as organotypic structures containing all of the expected
lineages of the intestinal epithelium. Our microengineered arrays and
fluidic devices build on this knowledge base to reconstruct
millimeter-scale primary intestinal epithelium that closely mimics the
polarized 3D in vivo microarchitecture of the intestine Chemical
gradients of growth and differentiation factors as well as cytokines are
readily applied across the tissues. These bioanalytical platforms are
envisioned as next generation systems for assay of microbiome-, drug-
and toxin-interactions with the intestinal epithelia. Finally intestinal
biopsy samples can be used to populate the constructs with cells
producing patient-specific tissues for personalized medicine.
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