PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Charles J. Zhang AU - Sophia R. Meyer AU - Matthew J. O’Meara AU - Sha Huang AU - Meghan M. Capeling AU - Daysha Ferrer-Torres AU - Charlie J. Childs AU - Jason R. Spence AU - Robert J. Fontana AU - Jonathan Z. Sexton TI - A Human Liver Organoid Screening Platform for DILI Risk Prediction AID - 10.1101/2021.08.26.457824 DP - 2022 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 2021.08.26.457824 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/07/29/2021.08.26.457824.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2022/07/29/2021.08.26.457824.full AB - Background and Aims Drug-induced liver injury (DILI), both intrinsic and idiosyncratic, causes frequent morbidity, mortality, clinical trial failures and post-approval withdrawal. This suggests an unmet need for improved in vitro models for DILI risk prediction that can account for diverse host genetics and other clinical factors. In this study, we evaluated the utility of human liver organoids (HLOs) for high-throughput DILI risk prediction and in an organ-on-chip system.Methods HLOs were derived from 3 separate iPSC lines and benchmarked on two platforms for their ability to model in vitro liver function and identify hepatotoxic compounds using biochemical assays for albumin, ALT, and AST, microscopy-based morphological profiling, and single-cell transcriptomics: 1) HLOs dispersed in 384-well formatted plates and exposed to a library of compounds. 2) HLOs adapted to a liver-on-chip system.ResultsDispersed HLOs derived from the 3 iPSC lines had similar DILI predictive capacity to intact HLOs in a high-throughput screening format allowing for measurable IC50 values of compound cytotoxicity. Distinct morphological differences were observed in cells treated with drugs exerting differing mechanisms of toxicity.On-chip HLOs significantly increased albumin production, CYP450 expression, and ALT/AST release when treated with known DILI drugs compared to dispersed HLOs and primary human hepatocytes. On-chip HLOs were able to predict the synergistic hepatotoxicity of tenofovir-inarigivir and showed steatosis and mitochondrial perturbation via phenotypic and transcriptomic analysis with exposure to FIAU and acetaminophen, respectively.Conclusions The high throughput and liver-on-chip system exhibit enhanced in vivo-like function and demonstrate the potential utility of these platforms for hepatotoxicity risk assessment. Tenofovir-inarigivr associated hepatotoxicity was observed and correlates with the clinical manifestation of DILI observed in patients.LAY SUMMARY Idiosyncratic (spontaneous, patient-specific) drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is difficult to study due to the lack of liver models that function as human liver tissue and are adaptable for large-scale drug screening. Human liver organoids grown from patient stem cells respond to known DILI-causing drugs in both a high-throughput and on a physiological “chip” culture system. These platforms show promise in their use as predictive model for novel drugs before entering clinical trials.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.ALTalanine aminotransferaseAPAPacetaminophenDILIdrug-induced liver injuryFIAUfialuridineHLAhuman leukocyte antigenHLOhuman liver organoidiPSCinduced-pluripotent stem cellsPaDLOCpatient-derived liver-on-chipPHHprimary human hepatocytesscRNA-seqSingle cell RNA sequencingUMAPUniform Manifold Approximation and Projection