A Plug for Human Stem Cell Research
To test whether chemicals are toxic to humans, researchers need to use liver cells that have been freshly harvested from mice or other mammals. A new collection of stable cell lines, described in BMC Biotechnology this week, could reduce the numbers of animals needed in such experiments.
The MMH-GH cell lines are derived from the liver cells of transgenic mice. These cells have been engineered to secrete human growth hormone when they are exposed to toxic compounds. The cells also continuously produce an activated version of the growth factor receptor, c-MET, which enables them to survive for longer than normal liver cells and to retain features of differentiated liver cells when they are grown in culture.
The researchers who created the cell lines come from Istituto Tecnologie Biomediche-National Research Council in Milan and Università La Sapienza in Rome. They write: "We believe that the MMH-GH cell lines provide a cheap, reproducible, rapid, reliable and ethically acceptable tool," for assessing the toxicity of chemicals.
To
test their system the researchers added toxic arsenic and cadmium
compounds to the cells and then looked for human growth hormone in the
culture media. They found that even at low doses these compounds caused
the cells to secrete the hormone -- and were therefore deemed to be
toxic. These low concentrations of the chemicals would not have been
picked up by current toxicity-testing methods, which brand a chemical
as 'toxic' only if it kills liver cells.
[...]
The MMH-GH cell lines have a further advantage over current toxicity testing methods, according to the researchers. As they are derived from clonal cell populations assays using these cells should also be easier to standardise than current tests, which use heterogeneous primary cell cultures.
Analysis: This could
be used to lower the cost of new drug development. It also could
have applications in environmental testing. Of course, if we
could develop liver cells derived from (noncancerous) human cell lines
it would be even better.
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