Engineered muscle tissues for disease modeling and drug screening applications

Publication date

2017-11-30T13:38:47Z

2018-11-01T06:10:22Z

2017-11-01

Abstract

Animal models have been the main resources for drug discovery and prediction of drugs’ pharmacokinetic responses in the body. However, noticeable drawbacks associated with animal models include high cost, low reproducibility, low physiological similarity to humans, and ethical problems. Engineered tissue models have recently emerged as an alternative or substitute for animal models in drug discovery and testing and disease modeling. In this review, we focus on skeletal muscle and cardiac muscle tissues by first describing their characterization and physiology. Major fabrication technologies (i.e., electrospinning, bioprinting, dielectrophoresis, textile technology, and microfluidics) to make functional muscle tissues are then described. Finally, currently used muscle tissue models in drug screening are reviewed and discussed

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Bentham Science Publishers

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Versió postprint del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1381612823666170215115445

Current Pharmaceutical Design, 2017, vol. 23, p. 2991-3004

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(c) Bentham Science Publishers, 2017

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