Bioengineering (Nov 2022)

Organs-on-Chips Platforms Are Everywhere: A Zoom on Biomedical Investigation

  • Mohamed Zommiti,
  • Nathalie Connil,
  • Ali Tahrioui,
  • Anne Groboillot,
  • Corinne Barbey,
  • Yoan Konto-Ghiorghi,
  • Olivier Lesouhaitier,
  • Sylvie Chevalier,
  • Marc G. J. Feuilloley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering9110646
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. 646

Abstract

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Over the decades, conventional in vitro culture systems and animal models have been used to study physiology, nutrient or drug metabolisms including mechanical and physiopathological aspects. However, there is an urgent need for Integrated Testing Strategies (ITS) and more sophisticated platforms and devices to approach the real complexity of human physiology and provide reliable extrapolations for clinical investigations and personalized medicine. Organ-on-a-chip (OOC), also known as a microphysiological system, is a state-of-the-art microfluidic cell culture technology that sums up cells or tissue-to-tissue interfaces, fluid flows, mechanical cues, and organ-level physiology, and it has been developed to fill the gap between in vitro experimental models and human pathophysiology. The wide range of OOC platforms involves the miniaturization of cell culture systems and enables a variety of novel experimental techniques. These range from modeling the independent effects of biophysical forces on cells to screening novel drugs in multi-organ microphysiological systems, all within microscale devices. As in living biosystems, the development of vascular structure is the salient feature common to almost all organ-on-a-chip platforms. Herein, we provide a snapshot of this fast-evolving sophisticated technology. We will review cutting-edge developments and advances in the OOC realm, discussing current applications in the biomedical field with a detailed description of how this technology has enabled the reconstruction of complex multi-scale and multifunctional matrices and platforms (at the cellular and tissular levels) leading to an acute understanding of the physiopathological features of human ailments and infections in vitro.

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