Microfluidics: Tissue Chips and Microphysiological Systems
A special issue of Micromachines (ISSN 2072-666X). This special issue belongs to the section "B:Biology and Biomedicine".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2020) | Viewed by 23081
Special Issue Editors
Interests: microfluidics; bioMEMS; tissue engineering; tissue chips; microphysiological systems
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: micro/nanofabrication; bioprinting; biomedical microdevices; microelectromechanical systems; microfluidics; medical and environmental sensors; smart textiles; biomaterials; artificial organs
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Regulatory approval of a single drug using the current drug discovery process costs ~ $800 million and takes ~ 15 years. A major limitation is the translation of results from animal models to patients. Nearly 30% of drugs are found to be toxic in humans despite being found to be safe in animal models wheras another 60% of drugs fail due to lack of efficacy due to interspecies differences in drug metabolizing enzymes. Therefore, there is significant interest in developing human models of human disease to overcome shortcomings with animal models. In the past few years, several major funding agencies including the NIH, DoD, NSF and CASIS have pushed for the development of Human Tissue Chip (TC) models that utilize either primary human cells or human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) derived cells. Physiologically relevant 3D TCs closely mimic organ/tissue -like structural organization, along with critical aspects of the native tissue environment to replicate in-vivo function. The ultimate goal is to combine multiple TCs together to form complex Microphysiological Systems (MPS) for drug screening and disease modeling. Microfluidic techniques provide unique tools to engineer complex tissue, providing opportunities to incorporate perfusion networks at the capillary scale, scaffolds for organization of complex 3D tissue architectures and incorporation of on-chip sensors/detectors for non-destructive readouts. Microfluidic networks can also enable communication between multiple TCs within a circulatory network. This special edition solicits original research articles, reviews, and opinions focused on the use of microfluidic technologies to construct TCs and /or integrate multiple TCs within a MPS.
Prof. Dr. Palaniappan Sethu
Prof. P. Ravi Selvaganapathy
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Tissue Chips
- Microphysiological Systems
- Microfluidics
- In-vitro Models
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