Uncovering the mechanism of troglitazone-mediated idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury with individual-centric models

Authors:
Salomé Roux , Sara Cherradi , Hong Tuan Duong 
In:
Source: Arch Toxicol
Publication Date: (2024)
Issue: 10: 1007
Research Area:
Gastroenterology
Toxicology
Drug Discovery
Cells used in publication:
Hepatocyte, human
Species: human
Tissue Origin: liver
Experiment

Educated macrophages and dendritic cells were prepared for each healthy donor in OneSmartDiff medium (PredictCan Biotechnologies, Grabels, France), a customizable person-dependent medium. OneSmartDiff medium is a defined medium on the basis of MammoCult® basal medium containing a broad-spectrum antibiotic supplemented with serum prepared from each individual. Absence of mycoplasma contamination was verified using MycoAlert® Mycoplasma Detection Kit from Lonza (Saint-Beauzire, France).

Primary human hepatocytes were purchased from Lonza.

Abstract

Idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury is a rare and unpredictable event. Deciphering its initiating-mechanism is a hard task as its occurrence is individual dependent. Thus, studies that utilize models that are not individual-centric might drive to a general mechanistic conclusion that is not necessarily true. Here, we use the individual-centric spheroid model to analyze the initiating-mechanism of troglitazone-mediated iDILI risk. Individual-centric spheroid models were generated using a proprietary cell educating technology. These educated spheroids contain hepatocytes, hepatic stellate cells, activated monocyte-derived macrophages, and dendritic cells under physiological conditions. We show that phases 1 and 2 drug-metabolizing enzymes were induced in an individual-dependent manner. However, we did not observe any association of DEMs induction and troglitazone (TGZ)-mediated iDILI risk. We analyzed TGZ-mediated iDILI and found that a 44-year-old male showed iDILI risk that is associated with TGZ-mediated suppression of IL-12 expression by autologous macrophages and dendritic cells. We performed a rescue experiment and showed that treatment of spheroids from this 44-year-old male with TGZ and recombinant IL-12 suppressed iDILI risk. We confirmed the mechanism in another 31-year-old female with iDILI risk. We demonstrate here that individual-centric spheroid are versatile models that allow to predict iDILI risk and to analyze a direct effect of the drug on activated macrophages and dendritic cells to uncover the initiating-mechanism of iDILI occurrence. This model opens perspectives for a personalized strategy to mitigate iDILI risk.