A lack of affordable and effective testing and screening procedures mean surprisingly little is known about the health hazards of many of the tens of thousands of chemicals in use in the world today. The recent rise in the number of children affected by neurological disorders such as autism has stirred valuable debate about the role chemicals play in our daily life, highlighting the need for improved methods of assessing chemicals for developmental neural toxicity. Current methods of testing chemicals for developmental neural toxicity include animal testing with rats or mice and in vitro testing using cultured primary cells or cell lines. Here, we review the current state of neural toxicity screening, analyze the limitations of these methods and, under the National Institutes of Health's new Microphysiological Systems initiative, describe a human pluripotent stem cell-based platform for developmental neural toxicity screens. © 2013 BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Hou, Z., Zhang, J., Schwartz, M. P., Stewart, R., Page, C. D., Murphy, W. L., & Thomson, J. A. (2013, December 20). A human pluripotent stem cell platform for assessing developmental neural toxicity screening. Stem Cell Research and Therapy. https://doi.org/10.1186/scrt373
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