Litcius/Paper detail

What Can an Organ-on-a-Chip Teach Us About Human Lung Pathophysiology?

Haiqing Bai, Donald E. Ingber

2022Physiology37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The intertwined relationship between structure and function has been key to understanding human organ physiology and disease pathogenesis. An organ-on-a-chip (organ chip) is a bioengineered microfluidic cell culture device lined by living cells and tissues that recapitulates organ-level functions in vitro. This is accomplished by recreating organ-specific tissue-tissue interfaces and microenvironmental biochemical and mechanical cues while providing dynamic perfusion through endothelium-lined vascular channels. In this review, we discuss how this emerging technology has contributed to the understanding of human lung structure-function relationships at the cell, tissue, and organ levels.

Topics & Concepts

Organ cultureOrgan-on-a-chipOrgan systemFunction (biology)BiologyCell biologyLungPathogenesisPathologyDiseaseIn vitroMedicineMicrofluidicsImmunologyNanotechnologyInternal medicineMaterials scienceBiochemistry3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchBiomedical and Engineering EducationInnovative Microfluidic and Catalytic Techniques Innovation