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Dive into the research topics where Eric Novik is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Novik.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2010

A microfluidic hepatic coculture platform for cell-based drug metabolism studies.

Eric Novik; Timothy J. Maguire; Piyun Chao; K.-C. Cheng; Martin L. Yarmush

Within the global pharmaceutical and biotech industries, there is significant interest in identifying in vitro screening systems that are more human-relevant-i.e., that offer greater utility in predicting subcellular and cellular physiological responses in humans in vivo-and that thereby allow investigators to reduce the incidence of costly late-stage failures during pharmaceutical clinical trials, as well as to reduce the use of animals in drug testing. Currently incumbent in vitro screening methods, such as culturing human hepatocytes in suspension, while useful, are limited by a lack of long term cellular function. In order to address this limitation, we have established an integrated, microfluidic, in vitro platform that combines the patented HmuREL((R)) microdevice with a hepatic coculture system. In the present report, we use this platform to study clearance and metabolite generation of a battery of molecular entities. The results show that the flow-based coculture system is capable of clearing, with improved resolution and predictive value, compounds with high, medium, and low clearance values. In addition, when coculture is coupled with flow, higher metabolite production rates are obtained than in static systems.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Oxygen-mediated enhancement of primary hepatocyte metabolism, functional polarization, gene expression, and drug clearance

Srivatsan Kidambi; Rubin Yarmush; Eric Novik; Piyun Chao; Martin L. Yarmush; Yaakov Nahmias

The liver is a major site for the metabolism of xenobiotic compounds due to its abundant level of phase I/II metabolic enzymes. With the cost of drug development escalating to over


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2009

Evaluation of a microfluidic based cell culture platform with primary human hepatocytes for the prediction of hepatic clearance in human

Piyun Chao; Timothy J. Maguire; Eric Novik; K.-C. Cheng; Martin L. Yarmush

400 million/drug there is an urgent need for the development of rigorous models of hepatic metabolism for preclinical screening of drug clearance and hepatotoxicity. Here, we present a microenvironment in which primary human and rat hepatocytes maintain a high level of metabolic competence without a long adaptation period. We demonstrate that co-cultures of hepatocytes and endothelial cells in serum-free media seeded under 95% oxygen maintain functional apical and basal polarity, high levels of cytochrome P450 activity, and gene expression profiles on par with freshly isolated hepatocytes. These oxygenated co-cultures demonstrate a remarkable ability to predict in vivo drug clearance rates of both rapid and slow clearing drugs with an R2 of 0.92. Moreover, as the metabolic function of oxygenated co-cultures stabilizes overnight, preclinical testing can be carried out days or even weeks before other culture methods, significantly reducing associated labor and cost. These results are readily extendable to other culture configurations including three-dimensional culture, bioreactor studies, as well as microfabricated co-cultures.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2014

Predictivity of dog co-culture model, primary human hepatocytes and HepG2 cells for the detection of hepatotoxic drugs in humans

Franck Atienzar; Eric Novik; Helga Gerets; Amit Parekh; Claude Delatour; Alvaro Cardenas; James S. MacDonald; Martin L. Yarmush; S. Dhalluin

Integral to the discovery of new pharmaceutical entities is the ability to predict in vivo pharmacokinetic parameters from early stage in vitro data generated prior to the onset of clinical testing. Within the pharmaceutical industry, a whole host of assay methods and mathematical models exist to predict the in vivo pharmacokinetic parameters of drug candidates. One of the most important pharmacokinetic properties of new drug candidates predicted from these methods and models is the hepatic clearance. Current methods, while useful, are still limited in their predictive efficacy. In order to address this issue, we have established a novel microfluidic in vitro culture system, the patented HmuREL device. The device comprises multiple compartments that are designed to be proportional to the physiological architectures and enhanced with the consideration of flow. Here we demonstrate the functionality of the liver-relevant chamber in the HmuREL device, and the feasibility of utilizing our system for predicting hepatic clearance. Cryopreserved human hepatocytes from a single donor were seeded within the HmuREL device to predict the in vivo hepatic clearance (CL(H)) of six marketed model compounds (carbamazepine, caffeine, timolol, sildenafil, imipramine, and buspirone). The intrinsic clearance rates from static culture controls, as well as clearance rates from the HmuREL device were subsequently compared to in vivo data available from the literature.


Current Drug Metabolism | 2009

Design and Application of Microfluidic Systems for In Vitro Pharmacokinetic Evaluation of Drug Candidates

Timothy J. Maguire; Eric Novik; Piyun Chao; Jeffrey Barminko; Yaakov Nahmias; Martin L. Yarmush; K.-C. Cheng

Drug induced liver injury (DILI) is a major cause of attrition during early and late stage drug development. Consequently, there is a need to develop better in vitro primary hepatocyte models from different species for predicting hepatotoxicity in both animals and humans early in drug development. Dog is often chosen as the non-rodent species for toxicology studies. Unfortunately, dog in vitro models allowing long term cultures are not available. The objective of the present manuscript is to describe the development of a co-culture dog model for predicting hepatotoxic drugs in humans and to compare the predictivity of the canine model along with primary human hepatocytes and HepG2 cells. After rigorous optimization, the dog co-culture model displayed metabolic capacities that were maintained up to 2 weeks which indicates that such model could be also used for long term metabolism studies. Most of the human hepatotoxic drugs were detected with a sensitivity of approximately 80% (n=40) for the three cellular models. Nevertheless, the specificity was low approximately 40% for the HepG2 cells and hepatocytes compared to 72.7% for the canine model (n=11). Furthermore, the dog co-culture model showed a higher superiority for the classification of 5 pairs of close structural analogs with different DILI concerns in comparison to both human cellular models. Finally, the reproducibility of the canine system was also satisfactory with a coefficient of correlation of 75.2% (n=14). Overall, the present manuscript indicates that the dog co-culture model may represent a relevant tool to perform chronic hepatotoxicity and metabolism studies.


Tissue Engineering Part C-methods | 2009

Enrichment of hepatocyte-like cells with upregulated metabolic and differentiated function derived from embryonic stem cells using S-NitrosoAcetylPenicillamine.

Nripen Sharma; Eric J. Wallenstein; Eric Novik; Tim Maguire; Rene Schloss; Martin L. Yarmush

One of the fundamental challenges facing the development of new chemical entities within the pharmaceutical industry is the extrapolation of key in vivo parameters from in vitro cell culture assays and animal studies. Development of microscale devices and screening assays incorporating primary human cells can potentially provide better, faster and more efficient prediction of in vivo toxicity and clinical drug performance. With this goal in mind, large strides have been made in the area of microfluidics to provide in vitro surrogates that are designed to mimic the physiological architecture and dynamics. More recent advancements have been made in the development of in vitro analogues to physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) models - a mathematical model that represents the body as interconnected compartments specific for a particular organ. In this review we highlight recent advancements in human hepatocyte microscale culture, and describe the next generation of integrated devices, whose potential allows for the high throughput assessment of drug metabolism, distribution and pharmacokinetics.


Drug Metabolism Letters | 2009

Prediction of Human Hepatic Clearance Using an In Vitro Plated Hepatocyte Clearance Model

Piyun Chao; Jeffrey Barminko; Eric Novik; Yi Han; Timothy J. Maguire; K.-C. Cheng

The generation of a large number of fully functional hepatocytes from a renewable cell source can provide an unlimited resource for bioartificial liver devices and cell replacement therapies. We have established a directed differentiation system using sodium butyrate treatment to generate an enriched population of hepatocyte-like cells from embryonic stem cells. A metabolic analysis of the hepatocyte populations revealed glycolytic and mitochondrial phenotypes similar to mouse hepatoma cells, implying that these cells represent an immature hepatocyte phenotype. To mediate further differentiation, S-NitrosoAcetylPenicillamine (SNAP), a nitric oxide donor, was utilized to induce mitochondrial development in the precursor populations. A comparative analysis of the different treated populations showed that 500microM SNAP treatment resulted in the generation of an enriched population of metabolically mature hepatocyte-like cells with increased differentiated function. Specifically, 500microM SNAP treatment increased glucose consumption, lactate production rates, mitochondrial mass, and potential as compared to untreated populations. In addition, functional analysis revealed that intracellular albumin content, urea secretion rates, and cytochrome P450 7a1 promoter activity were increased in the treated population. The methodology described here to generate an enriched population of metabolically and functionally mature hepatocyte-like cells may have potential implications in drug discovery and regenerative medicine.


Nature Communications | 2017

Long-term hepatitis B infection in a scalable hepatic co-culture system

Benjamin Y. Winer; Tiffany Huang; Eitan Pludwinski; Brigitte Heller; Felix Wojcik; Gabriel Lipkowitz; Amit Parekh; Cheul H. Cho; Anil Shrirao; Tom W. Muir; Eric Novik; Alexander Ploss

Previously we have used human hepatocytes in suspension by measuring the parent loss for prediction of metabolic clearance according to a 1(st)-order kinetic model. In this study, we evaluated a novel integrative approach using plated human hepatocytes to include both uptake processes and metabolism in a single assay. Test articles were added in the medium, and the intrinsic clearance was determined based on the disappearance of the parent compound from the medium. Three different methods: direct, well-stirred, and parallel tube were tested for scaling purpose. With 30 randomly selected compounds with clinical clearance data, the scaled clearance showed reasonable linear correlation with r(2) values of 0.67, 0.72, and 0.70 for direct, well-stirred and parallel tube models, respectively. When human serum albumin (HSA) was added to the incubation medium a shift to lower in vitro clearance was observed for most of the compounds, suggesting that protein binding may have an effect on the metabolic clearance. In the presence of 4% of HSA, which is equivalent to the albumin concentration in the human plasma, the in vitro clearance data have the best prediction of human clearance when using the well-stirred method, followed by the parallel tube method and direct method. This study demonstrates the utility of using plated human hepatocyte as an integrated system for the prediction of human metabolic clearance. In addition, evaluation of the protein binding shift in the clearance showed that a significant number of compounds may not follow the equilibrium assumption according to the well-stirred model.


Biotechnology Progress | 2008

Augmentation of EB-Directed Hepatocyte-Specific Function via Collagen Sandwich and SNAP

Eric Novik; Jeffery Barminko; Tim Maguire; Nripen Sharma; Eric J. Wallenstein; Rene Schloss; Martin L. Yarmush

Hepatitis B virus causes chronic infections in 250 million people worldwide. Chronic hepatitis B virus carriers are at risk of developing fibrosis, cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma. A prophylactic vaccine exists and currently available antivirals can suppress but rarely cure chronic infections. The study of hepatitis B virus and development of curative antivirals are hampered by a scarcity of models that mimic infection in a physiologically relevant, cellular context. Here, we show that cell-culture and patient-derived hepatitis B virus can establish persistent infection for over 30 days in a self-assembling, primary hepatocyte co-culture system. Importantly, infection can be established without antiviral immune suppression, and susceptibility is not donor dependent. The platform is scalable to microwell formats, and we provide proof-of-concept for its use in testing entry inhibitors and antiviral compounds.The lack of models that mimic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection in a physiologically relevant context has hampered drug development. Here, Winer et al. establish a self-assembling, primary hepatocyte co-culture system that can be infected with patient-derived HBV without further modifications.


northeast bioengineering conference | 2005

Alginate encapsulation and hepatic differentiation of embryonic stem cells

Timothy J. Maguire; Eric Novik; Rene Schloss; Martin L. Yarmush

The development of implantable engineered liver tissue constructs and ex vivo hepatocyte‐based therapeutic devices are limited by an inadequate hepatocyte cell source. In our previous studies, embryoid body (EB)‐mediated stem cell differentiation spontaneously yielded populations of hepatocyte lineage cells expressing mature hepatocyte markers such as albumin (ALB) and cytokeratin‐18 (CK18). However, these cultures neither yielded a homogenous hepatocyte lineage population nor exhibited detoxification function typical of a more mature hepatocyte lineage cell. In this study, secondary culture configurations were used to study the effects of collagen sandwich culture and oncostatin‐M (OSM) or S‐nitroso‐N‐acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) supplementation of EB‐derived hepatocyte‐lineage cell function. Quantitative immunofluorescence and secreted protein analyses were used to provide insights into the long‐term maintenance and augmentation of existing functions. The results of these studies suggest that SNAP, independent of the collagen supplementation, maintained the highest levels of ALB expression, however, mature liver‐specific CK18 was only expressed in the presence of gel sandwich culture supplemented with SNAP. In addition, albumin secretion and cytochrome P450 detoxification studies indicated that this condition was the best for the augmentation of hepatocyte‐like function. Maintenance and augmentation of hepatocyte‐like cells isolated from heterogeneous EB cell populations will be a critical step in generating large numbers of functional differentiated cells for therapeutic use.

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Amit Parekh

New Jersey Institute of Technology

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Cheul H. Cho

New Jersey Institute of Technology

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