Abstract

Kidney microphysiological systems (MPS) serve as potentially valuable preclinical instruments in probing mechanisms of renal clearance and osmoregulation. Current kidney MPS models target regions of the nephron, such as the glomerulus and proximal tubule (PCT), but fail to incorporate multiple filtration and absorption interfaces. Here, we describe a novel, partially open glomerulus and PCT microdevice that integrates filtration and absorption in a single MPS. The system equalizes pressure on each side of the PCT that operates with one side “closed” by recirculating into the bloodstream, and the other “opened” by exiting as primary filtrate. This design precisely controls the internal fluid dynamics and prevents loss of all fluid to the open side. Through this feature, an in vitro human glomerulus and proximal tubule MPS was constructed to filter human serum albumin and reabsorb glucose for seven days of operation. For proof-of-concept experiments, three human-derived cell types—conditionally immortalized human podocytes (CIHP-1), human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs), and human proximal tubule cells (HK-2)—were adapted into a common serum-free medium prior to being seeded into the three-component MPS (T-junction splitter, glomerular housing unit, and parallel proximal tubule barrier model). This system was optimized geometrically (tubing length, tubing internal diameter, and inlet flow rate) using in silico computational modeling. The prototype tri-culture MPS successfully filtered blood serum protein and generated albumin filtration in a physiologically realistic manner, while the device cultured only with proximal tubule cells did not. This glomerulus and proximal convoluted tubule MPS is a potential prototype for the human kidney used in both human-relevant testing and examining pharmacokinetic interactions.

Highlights

  • Biopharmaceutical research and development faces a major productivity crisis in the depreciating efforts to develop novel drugs [1]

  • We show here that the prototype tri-culture Microphysiological systems (MPS) successfully filtered blood serum protein, resorbed glucose, and generated albumin filtration in a physiologically realistic manner

  • Filtration and reabsorption of the glomerulus and proximal convoluted tubule (PCT) were assessed by two main devices in the construction of the MPS (Figure 1C,D)

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Summary

Introduction

Biopharmaceutical research and development faces a major productivity crisis in the depreciating efforts to develop novel drugs [1]. Despite over 30 years of investment in biomedical sciences and the scientific tools used in drug discovery, few results have been well translated in the preclinical and clinical stages [2,3]. Microphysiological systems (MPS) can accurately model human systems in a compact, efficient fluidic tool that can introduce controlled spatiotemporal micro-environments [6]. Such systems support measuring human responses, allow for real-time imaging, encourage cell differentiation, and pinpoint cell–cell interactions under a variety of physiological conditions [7,8,9,10,11]. Recent developments in stem cell research [12,13], regenerative medicine [14], biomaterials [15,16], tissue engineering [17,18,19,20], and microfluidics allow for integration into three-dimensional (3D) MPS

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