Victoria Hutter
University of Nottingham
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Publication
Featured researches published by Victoria Hutter.
Acta Biomaterialia | 2012
Lisa J. White; Victoria Hutter; Hongyun Tai; Steven M. Howdle; Kevin M. Shakesheff
The porous structure of a scaffold determines the ability of bone to regenerate within this environment. In situations where the scaffold is required to provide mechanical function, balance must be achieved between optimizing porosity and maximizing mechanical strength. Supercritical CO(2) foaming can produce open-cell, interconnected structures in a low-temperature, solvent-free process. In this work, we report on foams of varying structural and mechanical properties fabricated from different molecular weights of poly(DL-lactic acid) P(DL)LA (57, 25 and 15 kDa) and by varying the depressurization rate. Rapid depressurization rates produced scaffolds with homogeneous pore distributions and some closed pores. Decreasing the depressurization rate produced scaffolds with wider pore size distributions and larger, more interconnected pores. In compressive testing, scaffolds produced from 57 kDa P(DL)LA exhibited typical stress-strain curves for elastomeric open-cell foams whereas scaffolds fabricated from 25 and 15 kDa P(DL)LA behaved as brittle foams. The structural and mechanical properties of scaffolds produced from 57 kDa P(DL)LA by scCO(2) ensure that these scaffolds are suitable for potential applications in bone tissue engineering.
BioResearch Open Access | 2016
Sara Shafaie; Victoria Hutter; Michael T. Cook; Marc B. Brown; David Y.S. Chau
Abstract Tissue engineering is a rapidly expanding field that aims to establish feasible techniques to fabricate biologically equivalent replacements for diseased and damaged tissues/organs. Emerging from this prospect is the development of in vitro representations of organs for drug toxicity assessment. Due to the ever-increasing interest in ocular drug delivery as a route for administration as well as the rise of new ophthalmic therapeutics, there is a demand for physiologically accurate in vitro models of the eye to assess drug delivery and safety of new ocular medicines. This review summarizes current existing ocular models and highlights the important factors and limitations that need to be considered during their use.
European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics | 2014
Victoria Hutter; David Y.S. Chau; Constanze Hilgendorf; Alan Brown; Anne Cooper; Vanessa Zann; David I. Pritchard; Cynthia Bosquillon
The impact of P-glycoprotein (MDR1, ABCB1) on drug disposition in the lungs as well as its presence and activity in in vitro respiratory drug absorption models remain controversial to date. Hence, we characterised MDR1 expression and the bidirectional transport of the common MDR1 probe (3)H-digoxin in air-liquid interfaced (ALI) layers of normal human bronchial epithelial (NHBE) cells and of the Calu-3 bronchial epithelial cell line at different passage numbers. Madin-Darby Canine Kidney (MDCKII) cells transfected with the human MDR1 were used as positive controls. (3)H-digoxin efflux ratio (ER) was low and highly variable in NHBE layers. In contrast, ER=11.4 or 3.0 were measured in Calu-3 layers at a low or high passage number, respectively. These were, however, in contradiction with increased MDR1 protein levels observed upon passaging. Furthermore, ATP depletion and the two MDR1 inhibitory antibodies MRK16 and UIC2 had no or only a marginal impact on (3)H-digoxin net secretory transport in the cell line. Our data do not support an exclusive role of MDR1 in (3)H-digoxin apparent efflux in ALI Calu-3 layers and suggest the participation of an ATP-independent carrier. Identification of this transporter might provide a better understanding of drug distribution in the lungs.
European Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2012
Victoria Hutter; Constanze Hilgendorf; Anne Cooper; Vanessa Zann; David I. Pritchard; Cynthia Bosquillon
A rat respiratory epithelial cell culture system for in vitro prediction of drug pulmonary absorption is currently lacking. Such a model may however enhance the understanding of interspecies differences in inhaled drug pharmacokinetics by filling the gap between human in vitro and rat in/ex vivo drug permeability screens. The rat airway epithelial cell line RL-65 was cultured on Transwell inserts for up to 21 days at an air-liquid (AL) interface and cell layers were evaluated for their suitability as a drug permeability measurement tool. These layers were found to be morphologically representative of the bronchial/bronchiolar epithelium when cultured for 8 days in a defined serum-free medium. In addition, RL-65 layers developed epithelial barrier properties with a transepithelial electrical resistance (TEER) >300 Ω cm(2) and apparent (14)C-mannitol permeability (P(app)) values between 0.5-3.0 × 10(-6)cm/s; i.e., in the same range as established in vitro human bronchial epithelial absorption models. Expression of P-glycoprotein was confirmed by gene analysis and immunohistochemistry. Nevertheless, no vectorial transport of the established substrates (3)H-digoxin and Rhodamine123 was observed across the layers. Although preliminary, this study shows RL-65 cell layers have the potential to become a useful in vitro screening tool in the pre-clinical development of inhaled drug candidates.
Skin Tissue Models | 2018
Victoria Hutter; Stewart B. Kirton; David Y.S. Chau
Abstract The skin is often termed as the first line of defense against harmful agents by presenting a physical barrier and inhibiting the passage of compounds from the external environment to inside of the body. As part of its innate physiological structure, the skin contains a family of immunocompetent cells that illicit an immune response when an antigen is presented. Not only does this contribute an important role in the development and pathogenesis of a majority of skin disorders including infectious and allergic diseases, but also it provides a decisive assessment of exogenous agents that may cause harm to the host. Although animal models have historically been used for toxicological studies, limitations with regard to ethics and their biological relevance to humans have resulted in the drive toward cell culture as an alternative technique. The first generation of these culture models has been based on “simple” mimicry of the skin relying on the growth of a single population/layer of skin-specific cells, that is, keratinocytes, melanocytes, and fibroblasts. However, recent advances in the introduction of coculture systems, 3-D architecture, and organotypic cell culture technologies have now led to the development of more robust, representative, and accurate models. This chapter aims to emphasize the development and need for more complex and sophisticated immunocompetent skin models by outlining a number of key concepts considered during their development including cell source, cell-to-cell interaction, and associated readout parameters. In addition, this chapter also includes a review of currently available in vitro and in silico immunocompetent skin models and their optimization to further understand the mechanism(s) involved in drug development and disease elucidation applications.
International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2018
Sara Shafaie; Victoria Hutter; Marc B. Brown; Michael T. Cook; David Y.S. Chau
Graphical abstract Figure. No Caption available. Abstract The human vitreous humour is a complex gel structure whose composition and physical properties can vary considerably from person to person and also change with age. To date, the viscoelastic properties of the human vitreous gel has not been thoroughly investigated and despite many years of intensive research, an ideal vitreous substitute remains a challenge. Understanding the physical structure and properties of the vitreous is of fundamental and therapeutic interest, providing a clear insight into diffusion and transport of administered ophthalmic drug molecules into the vitreous. A number of mammalian surrogates, mainly bovine, porcine and ovine vitreous humours have been used in the literature as a means of studying ophthalmic drug transport and diffusion. In this study, the mechanical, physical and rheological properties of ovine, porcine, and bovine surrogates were investigated and compared to human vitreous. In addition, a bespoke Franz cell construct was used to compare the diffusion of a model drug (fluorescein) through vitreous samples. Despite the similarity in rheological properties between bovine, porcine and human vitreous samples, diffusion of fluorescein through the different vitreous samples revealed great differences in values of steady‐state flux and diffusion coefficient. In addition, a first‐generation vitreous mimic, composed of 4.5 mg/mL hyaluronic acid with complex viscosity of 0.3 ± 0.01 Pa has been evaluated and was demonstrated to be a better mimic of the human vitreous than the mammalian samples investigated.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Sara Shafaie; Victoria Hutter; Marc B. Brown; Michael T. Cook; David Y.S. Chau
In vitro cell based models have been invaluable tools for studying cell behaviour and for investigating drug disposition, toxicity and potential adverse effects of administered drugs. Within this drug discovery pipeline, the ability to assess and prioritise candidate compounds as soon as possible offers a distinct advantage. However, the ability to apply this approach to a cell culture study is limited by the need to provide an accurate, in vitro-like, microenvironment in conjunction with a low cost and high-throughput screening (HTS) methodology. Although the geometry and/or alignment of cells has been reported to have a profound influence on cell growth and differentiation, only a handful of studies have directly compared the growth of a single cell line on different shaped multiwell plates the most commonly used substrate for HTS, in vitro, studies. Herein, the impact of various surface geometries (flat, round and v-shaped 96 well plates), as well as fixed volume growth media and fixed growth surface area have been investigated on the characteristics of three commonly used human cell lines in biopharmaceutical research and development, namely ARPE-19 (retinal epithelial), A549 (alveolar epithelial) and Malme-3M (dermal fibroblastic) cells. The effect of the surface curvature on cells was characterised using a combination of a metabolic activity assay (CellTiter AQ/MTS), LDH release profiles (CytoTox ONE) and absolute cell counts (Guava ViaCount), respectively. In addition, cell differentiation and expression of specific marker proteins were determined using flow cytometry. These in vitro results confirmed that surface topography had a significant effect (p < 0.05) on cell activity and morphology. However, although specific marker proteins were expressed on day 1 and 5 of the experiment, no significant differences were seen between the different plate geometries (p < 0.05) at the later time point. Accordingly, these results highlight the impact of substrate geometry on the culture of a cell line and the influence it has on the cells’ correct growth and differentiation characteristics. As such, these results provide important implications in many aspects of cell biology the development of a HTS, in vitro, cell based systems to further investigate different aspects of toxicity testing and drug delivery.
Biomedical Materials | 2012
David Y.S. Chau; Sheridan V Brown; Melissa L. Mather; Victoria Hutter; Naing L. Tint; Harminder S Dua; Felicity R.A.J. Rose; Amir M. Ghaemmaghami
Pharmaceutical Research | 2017
Ewelina Hoffman; Aateka Patel; Doug Ball; Jan Klapwijk; Val Millar; Abhinav Kumar; Abigail Martin; Rhamiya Mahendran; Lea Ann Dailey; Ben Forbes; Victoria Hutter
Aerosol Science: Technology and Applications | 2014
Darragh Murnane; Victoria Hutter; Marie Harang