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In vitro Models of the Blood-Brain Barrier: Tools in Translational Medicine

期刊

FRONTIERS IN MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY
卷 2, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmedt.2020.623950

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in vitro; translational medicine; CNS drug delivery; Alzheimer ' s disease; COVID-19; microvesicles; multiple sclerosis; graphene

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Medical progress has historically relied on scientific discoveries, but recent advancements in technology have often outpaced laboratory research. To bridge this gap, the development of "human-on-a-chip" technology aims to provide a more realistic experimental model for testing novel therapies. This innovation has the potential to enhance understanding of diseases and improve patient care through more efficient diagnostics and treatments.
Medical progress has historically depended on scientific discoveries. Until recently, science was driven by technological advancements that, once translated to the clinic, fostered new treatments and interventions. More recently, technology-driven medical progress has often outpaced laboratory research. For example, intravascular devices, pacemakers for the heart and brain, spinal cord stimulators, and surgical robots are used routinely to treat a variety of diseases. The rapid expansion of science into ever more advanced molecular and genetic mechanisms of disease has often distanced laboratory-based research from day-to-day clinical realities that remain based on evidence and outcomes. A recognized reason for this hiatus is the lack of laboratory tools that recapitulate the clinical reality faced by physicians and surgeons. To overcome this, the NIH and FDA have in the recent past joined forces to support the development of a '' human-on-a-chip '' that will allow research scientists to performexperiments on a realistic replica when testing the effectiveness of novel experimental therapies. The development of a '' human-on-a-chip '' rests on the capacity to grow in vitro various organs-on-a-chip, connected with appropriate vascular supplies and nerves, and our ability to measure and perform experiments on these virtually invisible organs. One of the tissue structures to be scaled down on a chip is the human blood-brain barrier. This review gives a historical perspective on in vitro models of the BBB and summarizes the most recent 3D models that attempt to fill the gap between research modeling and patient care. We also present a summary of how these in vitro models of the BBB can be applied to study human brain diseases and their treatments. We have chosen NeuroAIDS, COVID-19, multiple sclerosis, and Alzheimer ' s disease as examples of in vitro model application to neurological disorders. Major insight pertaining to these illnesses as a consequence of more profound understanding of the BBB can reveal new avenues for the development of diagnostics, more efficient therapies, and definitive clarity of disease etiology and pathological progression.

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