Nature Communications (Jun 2019)

Hypoxia-enhanced Blood-Brain Barrier Chip recapitulates human barrier function and shuttling of drugs and antibodies

  • Tae-Eun Park,
  • Nur Mustafaoglu,
  • Anna Herland,
  • Ryan Hasselkus,
  • Robert Mannix,
  • Edward A. FitzGerald,
  • Rachelle Prantil-Baun,
  • Alexander Watters,
  • Olivier Henry,
  • Maximilian Benz,
  • Henry Sanchez,
  • Heather J. McCrea,
  • Liliana Christova Goumnerova,
  • Hannah W. Song,
  • Sean P. Palecek,
  • Eric Shusta,
  • Donald E. Ingber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-10588-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

In vitro blood-brain barrier (BBB) models do not fully recapitulate the in vivo barrier function. Here the authors develop an organ-on-a-chip BBB model using iPS-derived human brain endothelial cells differentiated under hypoxia, primary human pericytes and astrocytes, which maintains in vivo-like BBB barrier and shuttling functions for a week.