Open Access
Reproducing the human mucosal environment ex vivo
Author(s) -
Kenneth D. Swanson,
Evangelos A. Theodorou,
Efi Kokkotou
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
current opinion in gastroenterology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.165
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1531-7056
pISSN - 0267-1379
DOI - 10.1097/mog.0000000000000485
Subject(s) - ex vivo , medicine , in vivo , biology , genetics
The medical management of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) remains problematic with a pressing need for innovation in drug development as well as delivery of personalized therapies. Both the disease's inherent pathophysiologic complexity and heterogeneity in its etiology conspire in making it difficult to accurately model for either the purposes of basic research or drug development. Multiple attempts at creating meaningful experimental models have fallen short of adequately recapitulating the disease and most do not capture any aspect of the cause or the effects of patient heterogeneity that underlays most of the difficulties faced by physicians and their patients. In vivo animal models, tissue culture systems, and more recent synthetic biology approaches are all too simplistically reductionist for the task. However, ex vivo culture platforms utilizing patient biopsies offer a system that more closely mimics end-stage disease processes that can be studied in detail and subjected to experimental manipulations.