Chapter 4: Modelling the Human Respiratory System: Approaches for in Vitro Safety Testing and Drug Discovery Check Access
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Published:08 Dec 2014
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Series: Drug Discovery Series
Z. Prytherch and K. Bérubé, in Human-based Systems for Translational Research, ed. R. Coleman, The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2014, ch. 4, pp. 66-87.
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Respiratory research can be broken down into two main areas: (i) exposure to airborne substances (basic toxicology assessment); and (ii) respiratory diseases (understanding disease mechanisms and development of new therapeutics, including toxicological assessment). Both have suffered from inadequate and inaccurate models used to predict human toxicological end points. A growing need therefore exists for accurate in vitro models of the respiratory system, which accurately reflect the human lung situation in vivo. Advances in cell culture techniques and accessibility of human cells/tissues have resulted in the development of increasingly in vivo-like respiratory models. This chapter will focus on the development, advantages and disadvantages of these models and what the future holds for in vitro lung toxicology.