Abstract

Modeling clinically relevant tissue responses using cell models poses a significant challenge for drug development, in particular for drug induced liver injury (DILI). This is mainly because existing liver models lack longevity and tissue-level complexity which limits their utility in predictive toxicology. In this study, we established and characterized novel bioprinted human liver tissue mimetics comprised of patient-derived hepatocytes and non-parenchymal cells in a defined architecture. Scaffold-free assembly of different cell types in an in vivo-relevant architecture allowed for histologic analysis that revealed distinct intercellular hepatocyte junctions, CD31+ endothelial networks, and desmin positive, smooth muscle actin negative quiescent stellates. Unlike what was seen in 2D hepatocyte cultures, the tissues maintained levels of ATP, Albumin as well as expression and drug-induced enzyme activity of Cytochrome P450s over 4 weeks in culture. To assess the ability of the 3D liver cultures to model tissue-level DILI, dose responses of Trovafloxacin, a drug whose hepatotoxic potential could not be assessed by standard pre-clinical models, were compared to the structurally related non-toxic drug Levofloxacin. Trovafloxacin induced significant, dose-dependent toxicity at clinically relevant doses (≤ 4uM). Interestingly, Trovafloxacin toxicity was observed without lipopolysaccharide stimulation and in the absence of resident macrophages in contrast to earlier reports. Together, these results demonstrate that 3D bioprinted liver tissues can both effectively model DILI and distinguish between highly related compounds with differential profile. Thus, the combination of patient-derived primary cells with bioprinting technology here for the first time demonstrates superior performance in terms of mimicking human drug response in a known target organ at the tissue level.

Highlights

  • Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is the leading cause of acute liver failure and post-market drug withdrawals

  • The rapid loss of function in isolated human hepatocytes and species differences are major limitations in predictive toxicology which can lead to unexpected adverse outcomes in the clinic [10, 11]

  • We have developed a compartmentalized 3D human liver model, comprised of both parenchymal and non-parenchymal (HUVEC and hepatic stellate cells (HSC)) cells

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Summary

Introduction

Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is the leading cause of acute liver failure and post-market drug withdrawals. Toxic metabolites are produced and mediate tissue damage in distinct regions of the lobule, as has been demonstrated histologically in acute acetaminophen toxicity [17] With this in mind, phenotypes that are a consequence of specific spatial patterns, such as cellular polarity and metabolite production, may suffer from issues of reproducibility in self-assembled in vitro systems. Fabrication methods that enabled controlled spatial patterning of two or more cell types were limited to two-dimensional cultures or cultures that were a few cell layers thick [18] While those techniques allow preservation of oxygen and nutrient diffusion, they result in a higher proportion of contact with a solid surface versus cell-cell contact, which may accelerate loss of function in specialized cell types such as hepatocytes, and may result in aberrant responses to stimuli [20]. A fully human in vitro system comprising multiple liver cell types in a defined spatial architecture that can be used to gather both histopathological and biochemical data has the potential to provide important insights about the human tissue response in the pre-clinical setting, before costly human trials are initiated

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