The key to cure liver diseases
Utrecht Advanced in Vitro Models Hub
There鈥檚 an increase in liver diseases throughout the world, both in animals and in humans. Think of viral infections, or fatty liver disease due to obesity. There鈥檚 an organ shortage, human liver donors are scarce, so there鈥檚 an urgent need for alternative treatments. That鈥檚 why people are investing in the type of stem cell treatments that we develop in Utrecht. We are at the forefront of research into liver diseases.
Enabling technologies
鈥淭o study liver disease in great detail, we have developed all sorts of technology, such as stem cell culture and molecular biology鈥, says Bart Spee, assistant professor at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine at Utrecht 木瓜福利影视. According to Spee, combining pathology with molecular biology usually leads to very interesting findings and might lead to novel treatment options. 鈥淐urrently, we are working on a large project on the transplantation of adult stem cells in dogs. Once successful, this technology can be easily translated to the human clinic. In the veterinary clinic, blood based biomarkers can play a vital role in detecting the (severity) of liver diseases. We developed techniques to see what type of liver disease an animal has and can predict possible treatment outcome.鈥
There鈥檚 a big demand for these miniature livers from pharmaceutical companies as a lot of drugs actually get retracted from the market, because they鈥檙e toxic to the liver.
Miniature livers
Another focus point of Spee鈥檚 research is the biofabrication of a liver. Researchers of his group are making 3D printed miniature livers for toxicological screens. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a big demand for these miniature livers from pharmaceutical companies as a lot of drugs actually get retracted from the market, because they鈥檙e toxic to the liver. A system to check this is needed and we think that biofabricated livers can actually solve part of this problem.鈥
Saving animal lives
鈥淲e are already printing these miniature livers and they function, but we want them to be as optimal as real livers. That鈥檚 the challenge, because you have to reconstruct the entire liver with multiple cell types and include microfluidics, in order to mimic the entire organ and function. Spee and his group are now optimising this, together with Jos Malda and his group. 鈥淒rugs legislation now requires animal testing, so if we would have a system that prevents the testing of a new drug in animals, that would save a lot of animal lives.鈥
The key to cure liver diseases
There鈥檚 an increase in liver diseases throughout the world, both in animals and in humans. Think of viral infections, or fatty liver disease due to obesity. There鈥檚 an organ shortage, human liver donors are scarce, so there鈥檚 an urgent need for alternative treatments. That鈥檚 why people are investing in the type of stem cell treatments that we develop in Utrecht. We are at the forefront of research into liver diseases.
Bart Spee
Assistant Professor
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
Utrecht 木瓜福利影视