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      Microfluidic Blood-Brain Barrier Model Provides In Vivo-Like Barrier Properties for Drug Permeability Screening

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          Abstract

          Efficient delivery of therapeutics across the neuroprotective blood-brain barrier (BBB) remains a formidable challenge for central nervous system drug development. High-fidelity in vitro models of the BBB could facilitate effective early screening of drug candidates targeting the brain. In this study, we developed a microfluidic BBB model that is capable of mimicking in vivo BBB characteristics for a prolonged period and allows for reliable in vitro drug permeability studies under recirculating perfusion. We derived brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMECs) from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and cocultured them with rat primary astrocytes on the two sides of a porous membrane on a pumpless microfluidic platform for up to 10 days. The microfluidic system was designed based on the blood residence time in human brain tissues, allowing for medium recirculation at physiologically relevant perfusion rates with no pumps or external tubing meanwhile minimizing wall shear stress to test whether shear stress is required for in vivo-like barrier properties in a microfluidic BBB model. This BBB-on-a-chip model achieved significant barrier integrity as evident by continuous tight junction formation and in vivo-like values of trans-endothelial electrical resistance (TEER). The TEER levels peaked above 4000 Ω·cm 2 on day 3 on chip and were sustained above 2000 Ω·cm 2 up to 10 days, which are the highest sustained TEER values reported in a microfluidic model. We evaluated the capacity of our microfluidic BBB model to be used for drug permeability studies using large molecules (FITC-dextrans) and model drugs (caffeine, cimetidine, and doxorubicin). Our analyses demonstrated that the permeability coefficients measured using our model were comparable to in vivo values. Our BBB-on-a-chip model closely mimics physiological BBB barrier functions and will be a valuable tool for screening of drug candidates. The residence time based design of a microfluidic platform will enable integration with other organ modules to simulate multi-organ interactions on drug response.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          7502021
          1200
          Biotechnol Bioeng
          Biotechnol. Bioeng.
          Biotechnology and bioengineering
          0006-3592
          1097-0290
          30 June 2019
          21 July 2016
          January 2017
          23 July 2019
          : 114
          : 1
          : 184-194
          Affiliations
          [a ]Nancy E. and Peter C. Meinig School of Biomedical Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 14853, USA.
          Author notes
          Corresponding author: Michael L. Shuler, 381 Kimball Hall, Ithaca, New York 14853-7202, Phone: 607 255-7577, Fax: 607 254-5375, mls50@ 123456cornell.edu
          Article
          PMC6650146 PMC6650146 6650146 nihpa1039045
          10.1002/bit.26045
          6650146
          27399645
          bf40e5c3-2b45-4efa-a46f-38422838b7d1
          History
          Categories
          Article

          permeability,TEER,human iPS cells,organ on a chip,blood brain barrier

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