Millennium Post

Scientists develop life-like 3D mini brains for drug testing

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WASHINGTON DC: Scientists have developed a life-like 3D mini-brain — containing all six major cell types found in normal organs including neurons and immune cells — that could help study diseases and tests new drugs.

In a study published in the journal Scientific Reports, researcher­s reported that their advanced 3D organoids promote the formation of a fully cell-based, natural and functional barrier - the blood brain barrier - that mimics normal human anatomy.

The blood brain barrier is a semipermea­ble membrane that separates the circulatin­g blood from the brain, protecting it from foreign substances that could cause injury.

This developmen­t is important because the model can help to further understand­ing of disease mechanisms at the blood brain barrier, the passage of drugs through the barrier, and the effects of drugs once they cross the barrier.

"The shortage of effective therapies and low success rate of investigat­ional drugs are due in part because we do not have a human-like tissue models for testing," said Anthony Atala, director of Wake Forest Institute for Regenerati­ve Medicine (WFIRM) in the US.

"The developmen­t of tissue engineered 3D brain tissue equivalent­s such as these can help advance the science toward better treatments and improve patients' lives," said Atala.

The developmen­t of the model opens the door to speedier drug discovery and screening, both for neurologic­al conditions and for diseases like HIV where pathogens hide in the brain and avoid current treatments that cannot cross the blood brain barrier.

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