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Human stem cell-derived hepatocytes: breakthrough of an expedient tool for preclinical assessment of drug-induced liver injury?
New developments coming from the rapidly advancing human stem cell research field are in the pipeline. In fact, due to the biological exibility of stem cells, biologists and toxicologists strongly believe that once the in vivo mechanisms driving cell differentiation and dedifferentiation are fully u...
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Published in: | Archives of toxicology 2014-02, Vol.88 (2), p.183-184 |
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container_title | Archives of toxicology |
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creator | M. Rodrigues, Robim De Kock, Joery |
description | New developments coming from the rapidly advancing human stem cell research field are in the pipeline. In fact, due to the biological exibility of stem cells, biologists and toxicologists strongly believe that once the in vivo mechanisms driving cell differentiation and dedifferentiation are fully understood, stem cells can be modulated la carte. As a consequence, these cells will obtain the appropriate functionalities that are required for evaluating a particular toxicological mode of action (MoA). As such, stem cells could represent a valuable t for purpose tool in the unraveling of the MoA of a chemical substance at the molecular level. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s00204-014-1199-5 |
format | article |
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subjects | Biomedical and Life Sciences Biomedicine Cells, Cultured Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury Drug Evaluation, Preclinical - methods Drug therapy Environmental Health Guest Editorial Hepatocytes - drug effects Hepatology Humans Injuries Liver diseases Occupational Medicine/Industrial Medicine Pharmacology/Toxicology Stem cells Stem Cells - cytology Toxicity Tests - methods |
title | Human stem cell-derived hepatocytes: breakthrough of an expedient tool for preclinical assessment of drug-induced liver injury? |
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