Publication
Engineering a 3D functional human peripheral nerve in vitro using the Nerve-on-a-Chip platform

Abstract

Neurological drug development faces significant challenges due to high costs and low clinical trial success rates. More predictive preclinical models are needed to enhance translational success. NerveSim®, a novel human Nerve-on-a-Chip platform, provides a microphysiological system (MPS) that mimics human peripheral nerve physiology, enabling high-throughput neurotoxicity screening. This platform integrates induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived neurons and primary human Schwann cells, forming a functional 3D nerve model capable of electrophysiological and morphological assessments.

NerveSim® employs multi-electrode array (MEA) technology to record compound action potentials (CAPs) at multiple locations, allowing longitudinal functional neurotoxicity assessment. Additionally, a novel live-cell imaging analysis quantifies axonal morphological changes over time. The platform was tested with chemotherapeutic compounds, demonstrating its ability to detect drug-induced neurotoxicity through both functional and structural endpoints. These findings establish NerveSim® as a powerful tool for evaluating neurotoxic effects in drug discovery, reducing reliance on animal models and improving preclinical prediction.

Key Learnings

  • Enhanced Predictive Power – NerveSim® improves translational accuracy compared to traditional animal models, offering human-relevant neurotoxicity insights.
  • Functional & Morphological Assessments – The platform enables electrophysiological (CAP-based) and morphological (axon fragmentation) screening, providing a comprehensive toxicity profile.
  • High-Throughput Capability – The 24-well format increases efficiency, making large-scale neurotoxicity screening feasible.
  • Differentiated Chemotherapeutic Toxicity – Results showed distinct neurotoxic effects between auristatins, maytansinoids, vinca alkaloids, and ADCs, highlighting the importance of multidimensional toxicity assessments.
  • Non-Invasive, Longitudinal Analysis – The system allows for repeated measures over time, minimizing variability and improving drug candidate evaluation.

Methods

Electrophysiological Neurotoxicity Testing

  • CAPs were recorded from 10 embedded electrodes along the NerveSim® channel.
  • Stimuli (1–48 µA) were applied at multiple locations, generating a velocity envelope for nerve conduction analysis.
  • The velocity density index (VDI) quantified changes in nerve function pre- and post-drug exposure.

Morphological Neurotoxicity Analysis

  • Live-cell imaging captured axonal morphology over time.
  • Automated segmentation quantified fiber length, number, and fragmentation.
  • The nerve degeneration index (NDI) was calculated to assess structural damage.

Toxicity Assessment & IC50 Calculation

  • Chemotherapeutic compounds (auristatins, maytansinoids, vinca alkaloids, ADCs) were tested.
  • Electrophysiology and imaging-based IC50 values were compared for sensitivity and agreement.

Conclusion

NerveSim® represents a breakthrough in neurotoxicity screening, providing clinically relevant, high-throughput, and multidimensional assessments of drug-induced nerve damage. By integrating functional and morphological data, this human-relevant in vitro platform accelerates drug discovery while reducing reliance on animal models.

Sharma, A. D., McCoy, L., Jacobs, E., Willey, H., Behn, J. Q., Nguyen, H., Bolon, B., Curley, J. L., & Moore, M. J. (2019). Engineering a 3D functional human peripheral nerve in vitro using the Nerve-on-a-Chip platform. Scientific Reports, 9, 8921.

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