Janick Stucki
University of Bern
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Publication
Featured researches published by Janick Stucki.
European Journal of Nanomedicine | 2015
Peter Wick; Savvina Chortarea; O. Guenat; Matthias Roesslein; Janick Stucki; Stephanie Hirn; Alke Petri-Fink; Barbara Rothen-Rutishauser
Abstract Engineered nanomaterials have unique and novel properties enabling wide-ranging new applications in nearly all fields of research. As these new properties have raised concerns about potential adverse effects for the environment and human health, extensive efforts are underway to define reliable, cost- and time-effective, as well as mechanistic-based testing strategies to replace the current method of animal testing, which is still the most prevalent model used for the risk assessment of chemicals. Current approaches for nanomaterials follow this line. The aim of this review is to explore and qualify the relevance of new in vitro and ex vivo models in (nano)material safety assessment, a crucial prerequisite for translation into applications.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Janick Stucki; Nina Hobi; Artur Galimov; Andreas Stucki; Nicole Schneider-Daum; Claus-Michael Lehr; Hanno Huwer; Manfred Frick; Manuela Funke-Chambour; Thomas Geiser; O. Guenat
Organs-on-chips have the potential to improve drug development efficiency and decrease the need for animal testing. For the successful integration of these devices in research and industry, they must reproduce in vivo contexts as closely as possible and be easy to use. Here, we describe a ‘breathing’ lung-on-chip array equipped with a passive medium exchange mechanism that provide an in vivo-like environment to primary human lung alveolar cells (hAEpCs) and primary lung endothelial cells. This configuration allows the preservation of the phenotype and the function of hAEpCs for several days, the conservation of the epithelial barrier functionality, while enabling simple sampling of the supernatant from the basal chamber. In addition, the chip design increases experimental throughput and enables trans-epithelial electrical resistance measurements using standard equipment. Biological validation revealed that human primary alveolar type I (ATI) and type II-like (ATII) epithelial cells could be successfully cultured on the chip over multiple days. Moreover, the effect of the physiological cyclic strain showed that the epithelial barrier permeability was significantly affected. Long-term co-culture of primary human lung epithelial and endothelial cells demonstrated the potential of the lung-on-chip array for reproducible cell culture under physiological conditions. Thus, this breathing lung-on-chip array, in combination with patients’ primary ATI, ATII, and lung endothelial cells, has the potential to become a valuable tool for lung research, drug discovery and precision medicine.
Lab on a Chip | 2015
Andreas Stucki; Janick Stucki; Sean Hall; Marcel Felder; Yves Mermoud; Ralph A. Schmid; Thomas Geiser; O. Guenat
Integrative Biology | 2014
Marcel Felder; Andreas Stucki; Janick Stucki; Thomas Geiser; O. Guenat
Lab on a Chip | 2015
Janick Stucki; O. Guenat
Sensors and Actuators B-chemical | 2018
Yves Mermoud; Marcel Felder; Janick Stucki; Andreas Stucki; O. Guenat
Archive | 2014
O. Guenat; Marcel Felder; Andreas Stucki; Janick Stucki; Thomas Geiser
Toxicology Letters | 2018
A.O. Stucki; G. Raggi; S. Sigrist; P. Zamprogno; Nicole Schneider-Daum; Claus-Michael Lehr; Hanno Huwer; Janick Stucki; Nina Hobi; O. Guenat
Toxicology Letters | 2017
Nina Hobi; Janick Stucki; Artur Galimov; Nicole Schneider-Daum; Claus-Michael Lehr; Hanno Huwer; Manfred Frick; Thomas Geiser; O. Guenat
Toxicology Letters | 2017
Pauline Zamprogno; Sven Achenbach; Janick Stucki; Nina Hobi; Nicole Schneider-Daum; Claus-Michael Lehr; Hanno Huwer; Ralph A. Schmid; O. Guenat