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Biomarker drug activity marker

It is often possible to address function more specifically in in vitro assays, where functional parameters are usually very sensitive readouts of adverse effects. For example trans-epithelial electrical resistance (TEER) is a very sensitive marker of epithelial disturbances. TEER measures the barrier function of the entire mono-layer and is utilized to study functional disturbances of many epithelial/endothelial cell types including blood-brain barrier, pulmonary, renal, and gastrointestinal cells. Its sensitivity lies in the fact that only a small proportion of cell death has a very large impact on barrier function. Additionally, cell stress can interfere with the arrangement and population of tight junction proteins [16] thus, TEER can in certain conditions measure functional disturbances in the absence of cell death [13]. Also since TEER can be measured noninvasively, it is nondestructive and can be used to monitor the effects of treatment over days and weeks [13, 17]. For excitable cells, electrical activity has also been proven to be an extremely sensitive parameter of adverse drug reactions and microelectrode arrays have been employed successfully to monitor neurotoxicity in vitro [18]. Also, for contractile cells, such as cardiomyocytes, the use of impedance measurements to measure the effects of compounds on spontaneous contraction has been demonstrated to be a very sensitive functional monitoring parameter in vitro [19, 20], Admittedly, none of the aforementioned techniques are true biomarkers per se however, such measurements illustrate the fact that in vitro techniques allow certain possibilities that are not practically tenable in the whole body. [Pg.462]

Zhang, J., Hanig, J. R, and De Felice, A. F. (2012). Biomarkers of endothelial cell activation Candidate markers for drug-induced vasculitis in patients or drug-induced vascular injury in animals. Vascul Pharmacol 56, 14-25. [Pg.406]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.458 ]




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