fbpx The lung on a chip | Page 21 | Science in the net

The lung on a chip

Read time: 2 mins

An illness reproduced using human tissue which houses an electronic chip. The original result achieved by the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering researchers at Harvard University, authors of the work published this week in Science Traslation medicine.

The reproduced human tissue is a lung - live human lung cells conceal a chip - and the illness is pulmonary edema. The lung-on-a-chip represents a device that the research team, led by Donald Ingberg, created, in actual fact, two years ago for the first time, engineered on the basis of a flexible polymer matrix the size of a memory card , with an internal channel structure made in the same way as a computer microchip. Two of the internal channels are separated by a soft and porous membrane; on one side, there are human lung cells, whilst on the other side, there are capillary blood cells. The vacuum environment created inside the channels (void of external air pressure) allows the interface to simulate the human lung contraction mechanism during the breathing process.

At Harvard, this device was primarily used to study the toxicity of pharmacology treatments applied to the lungs, and to identify new, potential treatments, thanks to this new approach to human organs. Scientists actually used a drug for chemotherapy (interleukin-2) directly on the micro-lung recreated on the chip. The observed effects included the advantage the physical respiration mechanism provided to the action of the drug on the pulmonary edema in vacuum conditions, information which was not possible up until now. This effect may provide suggestions for new strategies to adopt in chemotherapy drug treatment (for example the use of a ventilator to minimize the volume of air entering the lungs) and new methods governing organ-related medicine research. According to researchers: "The major pharmaceutical companies spend lots of time and large amounts of money on cell cultures and animal testing to develop new drugs, however, often, these methods are not able to predict all the possible effects these substances may have on humans".

The work was financed by the National Institute for Health, Food and Drug Administration and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.


Autori: 
Sezioni: 
Indice: 
Medicine

prossimo articolo

Europe votes on the new air quality directive

The European Parliament's vote (and subsequently the Council of Europe's) on the new European Directive on air quality is expected for September 13. This directive updates the allowed atmospheric pollutant limits, bringing them closer to those established by the WHO in 2021. Resistance to the new objectives, mainly coming from the industrial world and established economic interests in certain regions, makes the outcome of the vote uncertain. However, there are no serious scientific or political reasons to oppose or attempt to dilute the more ambitious limits proposed by the new directive.

Image credits: JC Gellidon/Unsplash

The new European Directive on air quality, currently under discussion in the European Parliament, updates the concentration limits of major air pollutants, bringing them closer to those set by the new guidelines of the World Health Organization (2021). The outcome of the vote, scheduled for September 13, is uncertain.