Microphysiological Systems: from Organoids to Organs-on-chip
23-27 sept. 2024
IESC - Cargèse (France)
https://microphysio24.sciencesconf.org
It is becoming increasingly clear that even the best in vivo models such as
genetically-modified mouse models or orthotopic patient-derived xenografts
cannot recapitulate the full complexity of human physiology. In addition, in
vivo models do not comply with ‘3R’ – Replacement, Reduction,
Refinement – calling for in vitro alternatives to mimic functional organs
and pathologies.
Two parallel and complementary in vitro approaches have been undertaken by
researchers coming from various fields since the early 2010s: organoids and
organs-on-chip, that together form the vast domain of micro-physiological
systems. On the one hand, biology groups have worked on a better definition
of the cellular microenvironment in terms of cell-matrix interaction and
chemicals leading to three-dimensional self-organization of cells forming
functional organ sub-units, called organoids. On the other hand,
organs-on-chip primarily come from the field of microfluidics, with the
end-goal of imposing a well-defined topology and physico-chemical environment
onto cells, to understand quantitatively the simplest design principles of
organ response and function. The recent interactions between these fields
have led to the development of exquisite micro-physiological systems
mimicking organs (e.g. gut, liver, lung...). The successful development and
assessment of these approaches require sophisticated techniques to sense and
probe – optically or electrochemically – the physiological parameters,
alongside advanced three-dimensional microscopy to investigate cell
architecture and topology, and biomaterial developments for proper topology
and cell-matrix interaction control.
The use of micro-physiological systems have led both to fundamental insights
into the mechanisms of organogenesis, and is opening the door to numerous
clinical applications. As research advances, our mechanistic understanding on
the role of the microenvironment will require cooperation between an
expanding number of fields of science. The aim of this conference is to
gather together researchers coming from the many fields that define the new
paradigm of micro-physiological systems, from theorists to experimentalists
all the way to bioengineers, clinicians and researchers from pharmaceutical
companies.
Discipline scientifique :
Biotechnologies
Lieu de la conférence