Scientific Poster
Assessing Chemotherapeutics Neurotoxicity Using Human Cells Based High-Throughput Neuronal-Schwann Cells Culture System

Abstract

Background & Purpose:

High-throughput screening (HTS) for neurotoxicity has lagged due to the absence of physiologically relevant human neuronal cell models. This study addresses that gap by developing and evaluating a co-culture system of human iPSC-derived sensory neurons (hSNs) and primary human Schwann cells (hSCs) to improve the prediction of chemotherapeutic drug safety.

Methods:

The study compared 2D monocultures and co-cultures using Paclitaxel and Oxaliplatin. Key metrics included neurite length, total processes, total branches, and cell counts. Multielectrode arrays (MEA) were also used to assess neuronal firing rates.

Results:

  • Co-cultures demonstrated higher effective concentration (EC50) values than monocultures, indicating greater resilience.
  • Paclitaxel exhibited greater toxicity on Schwann cells than neurons, while Oxaliplatin showed no neurotoxicity in monocultures but induced toxicity in co-cultures.
  • Co-cultures demonstrated higher spontaneous firing rates compared to monocultures.
  • Neurons-only conditions were slower to reach electrical activity, especially in low-density conditions.

Conclusion:

This study highlights the value of co-culture systems in improving the accuracy of chemotherapeutic neurotoxicity assessments. The system effectively models Schwann cell involvement and enables robust screening for drug-induced neurotoxicity.

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