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No more animal testing! Tiny chips may replace practice soon

The chips are translucent, giving researchers a window into the inner workings of the organ being studied.

No more animal testing! Tiny chips may replace practice soon (Image for representational purposes only)

New Delhi: Product testing on animals is a practice that is firmly looked down upon and highly condemned. In some cities around the world, it is also a forbidden act.

Many companies use their products on animals before they enter the markets to check for chemical reactions and/or allergies. However, this practice has proven highly harmful and has also resulted in the animals' death.

Now, to curb such a situation and keeping in mind the safety of animals, researchers have developed a new 'organs-on-chips' technology that could replace animals for testing new drugs or supplements.

The flexible polymer organ-chips contain tiny channels lined with living human cells and are capable of reproducing blood and air flow just as in the human body.

The chips are translucent, giving researchers a window into the inner workings of the organ being studied.

Last week, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced a multi-year research and development agreement with a company called Emulate, founded by researchers at Harvard University, to evaluate the "organs-on-chips" technology.

Research will begin with a liver-chip but the agreement may expand in the future to cover additional organ-chips, including kidney, lung and intestine models, FDA said.

The ultimate goal is to predict how specific organs will respond to exposure to potential chemical hazards found in foods, cosmetics and/or dietary supplements with greater precision than other methods currently being used, such as cell-culture or animal-based tests.

"The chips were first developed to evaluate the effectiveness of drugs but have come to be seen as a potentially useful technology in our efforts to ensure the safety of the foods and cosmetics we regulate," FDA said.

"For example, they can be put to work to see how the body processes an ingredient in a dietary supplement or a chemical in a cosmetic and how a toxin or combination of toxins affects cells, information that ultimately can be used to help assess risks to human health," it said.

Organs-on-chips have been the focus of a public-private collaboration between FDA, the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) since 2012.

(With PTI inputs)

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