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On-chip recapitulation of clinical bone-marrow toxicities and patient-specific pathophysiology

The inaccessibility of living bone marrow hampers the study of its pathophysiology under myelotoxic stress induced by drugs, radiation or genetic mutations. Here, we show that a vascularized human bone-marrow-on-a-chip supports the differentiation and maturation of multiple blood-cell lineages over...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chou, David B., Frismantas, Viktoras, Milton, Yuka, David, Rhiannon, Pop-Damkov, Petar, Ferguson, Douglas, MacDonald, Alexander, Bölükbaşı, Özge Vargel, Joyce, Cailin E., Teixeira, Liliana S. Moreira, Rech, Arianna, Jiang, Amanda, Calamari, Elizabeth, Jalili-Firoozinezhad, Sasan, Furlong, Brooke A., O’Sullivan, Lucy R., Ng, Carlos F., Choe, Youngjae, Clauson, Susan, Myers, Kasiani C., Weinberg, Olga K., Hasserjian, Robert P., Novak, Richard, Levy, Oren, Prantil-Baun, Rachelle, Novina, Carl D., Shimamura, Akiko, Ewart, Lorna, Ingber, Donald E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7160021/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31988457
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41551-019-0495-z
Descripción
Sumario:The inaccessibility of living bone marrow hampers the study of its pathophysiology under myelotoxic stress induced by drugs, radiation or genetic mutations. Here, we show that a vascularized human bone-marrow-on-a-chip supports the differentiation and maturation of multiple blood-cell lineages over 4 weeks while improving CD34+ cell maintenance, and that it recapitulates aspects of marrow injury, including myeloerythroid toxicity after clinically relevant exposures to chemotherapeutic drugs and ionizing radiation as well as marrow recovery after drug-induced myelosuppression. The chip comprises a fluidic channel filled with a fibrin gel in which CD34(+) cells and bone-marrow-derived stromal cells are co-cultured, a parallel channel lined by human vascular endothelium and perfused with culture medium, and a porous membrane separating the two channels. We also show that bone-marrow chips containing cells from patients with the rare genetic disorder Shwachman–Diamond syndrome reproduced key haematopoietic defects and led to the discovery of a neutrophil-maturation abnormality. As an in vitro model of haematopoietic dysfunction, the bone-marrow-on-a-chip may serve as a human-specific alternative to animal testing for the study of bone-marrow pathophysiology.