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PhysioMimix® is a suite of hardware, consumables and assay protocols that enable you to recreate complex human biology and accurately predict human drug responses.

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- Liver-on-a-chip model
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- Gut/Liver-on-a-chip models

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Investigate the validated core application areas that our PhysioMimix® products and services support

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Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis
Hepatitis B
Pulmonary infection
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Drug-induced liver injury
Immune-mediated liver injury
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SOT 2026 Annual Meeting and ToxExpo

January 30, 2026

Event > Conference >

SOT 2026 Annual Meeting and ToxExpo


Visit our PhysioMimix® Organ-on-a-chip lab.

Learn more about the most advanced in vitro models available

cnb1568 sot 2026 event logo v1 | SOT 2026
March 22nd - 25th, 2026
San Diego
Book a meeting at SOT 2026

Visit us at SOT!


Visit our PhysioMimix® Organ-on-a-chip lab – Stand #2036.

Head to our stand for an exclusive, hands-on Organ-on-a-chip experience like no other!

We’re excited to showcase our PhysioMimix portfolio! With advanced hardware, validated protocols, and consumables, we have the tools to elevate your workflow.

Join us at our booth to learn more about our latest innovations. Grab an invitation to our upcoming e-symposium.

Find Out More
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What’s New?

Explore the PhysioMimix® Core!

The only microphysiological system with validated performance across single-, multi-organ, and higher throughput configurations

The PhysioMimix Core offers a unified and flexible solution that’s easy to adopt, adapt and scale.

  • Ensures a simple start for immediate productivity
  • Offers flexibility to grow with your needs​
  • Matches immediate and future demand

News

cnb1439 3rs project page ad v1 | SOT 2026

3Rs project with FDA

Building Confidence in MPS for Regulatory Applications!  

CN Bio is participating in a 3Rs Collaborative-led project with the FDA to build confidence in Liver MPS for DILI

Learn more

Attend our exhibitor session:

Organ-on-a-chip Toxicology Testing: Easy to Adopt, Adapt and Scale with PhysioMimix Core

In our lunchtime seminar, industry experts will discuss the use of liver microphysiological systems (MPS) in safety testing using the PhysioMimix® Core.

We demonstrate how Liver MPS complement and enhance existing approaches, enabling the early identification of drug-induced liver injury (DILI) risks, mapping of adverse outcome pathways, plus in vivo study optimization to reduce animal use. We describe how the PhysioMimix Core is easy to adopt, adapt and scale to match your future demand.

Key learnings:

  • Workflow limitation that can be addressed with adaptable MPS models
  • How to start simple, creating or customizing models to match your context of use
  • How to scale up throughput and data outputs

Join the discussion and enjoy a complimentary lunch on us!

Date: Monday, 23 March​ 2026

Time: 12:15 – 13:15​

Room: 23A

Presenters: Dr. Emily Richardson (CN Bio)

Dr. Tomasz Kostrzewski (CN Bio)

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Visit our poster presentations:

Translational Toxicology: Adapting MPS for cross-species evaluation of hepatotoxicity risk

Abstract No: 3404

Poster Board: G547

Date: Mon, 23 March 2026

Time: 13:45 – 16:15

Room: Hall B

Presenter: TBC

More Info

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Translational Toxicology: Adapting Liver Microphysiological System for Cross-Species Evaluation of Hepatotoxicity Risk

Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) remains a leading cause of drug candidate attrition during development, underscoring the need for improved translational models that can predict human-specific toxicities. Traditional animal models, while informative for systemic toxicity, often fall short in forecasting human liver responses due to inherent interspecies differences. To address this translational gap, we leveraged the PhysioMimix® Organ-on-Chip (OOC) Core System to develop a robust DILI assay using primary hepatocytes from human, rat, and dog sources.
Methods
Using the PhysioMimix Core System, human, rat or dog hepatocytes were cultured as 3D liver microtissues under dynamic perfusion in the Liver-12 plate for up to 14 days, maintaining stable species-specific functionality (CYP activity, albumin, urea). A panel of six reference compounds (Troglitazone, Pioglitazone, Nefazodone, Buspirone, Tolcapone and Entacapone) recommended by the IQ MPS Consortium, including high-risk DILI agents and structural analogues with low human liability, was applied across a 7-point dosing regimen over four days. Functional in vitro and clinical biomarkers (albumin, urea, LDH, ALT) were monitored to assess hepatocellular health.
Results
The assay successfully captured known species-specific toxicities. For instance, nefazodone and troglitazone (DILI Rank 8) induced hepatotoxicity in human and rat models, while dog hepatocytes showed reduced sensitivity. Conversely, buspirone and entacapone exhibited minimal toxicity in animal models, though the human MPS detected subtle hepatotoxic signals at higher entacapone concentrations, highlighting its sensitivity to rare DILI events. Albumin consistently emerged as a sensitive cross-species marker, with dose-dependent decreases aligning with known toxic profiles.
Conclusions
These findings demonstrate the value of integrating human and animal liver MPS models to enhance cross-species interpretation and improve in vitro–in vivo extrapolation (IVIVE). The PhysioMimix system can be simply adapted to test multiple species in parallel to determine species-specific toxicity. As regulatory interest in MPS technologies grows, this approach offers a promising path to refine liver safety assessments, reduce reliance on and numbers of animal models used, and better predict human hepatotoxicity risks earlier in the drug development pipeline.

Presenter: Dr Emily Richardson

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Scaling Without Compromise: Liver MPS for lead optimization screens to investigative tox

Abstract No: 3706

Poster Board: A134

Date: Mon, 23 March 2026

Time: 09:15 – 11:45

Room: Hall B

Presenter: TBC

More Info

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Scaling Without Compromise: Liver MPS for Lead Optimization Screens to Investigative Toxicology

Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) remains the most common cause for acute liver failure in the USA and Europe and is a leading cause of attrition of compounds in drug development. Prediction of clinical safety is still a major hurdle in drug discovery and development, with many late-stage attrition events still occurring due to limited translatability of current in vitro or in vivo preclinical models. Microphysiological systems (MPS), otherwise known as organ-on-a-chip (OOC), provide a solution to this challenge by enabling the long-term culture and in-depth examination of highly human relevant liver microtissues. However, scaling and throughput of OOC have in the past been perceived as a challenge. Here, we present two solutions based on their different contexts of use. Firstly, a higher throughput approach, the PhysioMimix® Multi-chip Liver-48 plate can be applied within the lead optimization process for screening of compounds, up to 288 samples (or chips) per run. Secondly, due to its enhanced tissue size and sampling volume, the Liver-12 plate can further characterize DILI events at a deeper level and their associated mechanisms of toxicity through a wide range of liver-specific endpoints.
Methods
Using the PhysioMimix® Core System, primary human hepatocytes and Kupffer cells were cultured in 3D microtissues on engineered scaffolds in either the Liver-48 or Liver-12 plates under perfusion for eight days. The Liver-48 microtissues were subjected to 4-day exposure to two tool compounds recommended by the IQ MPS Consortium for DILI validation (troglitazone and pioglitazone) tested at seven concentrations alongside positive control (chlorpromazine) and vehicle control (0.1% DMSO). Each condition was tested in triplicate. For mechanistic studies, the Liver-12 microtissues were subjected to 10-day exposure to three tool compounds (diclofenac, troglitazone and pioglitazone). An equivalent dose to clinical concentration and 1.5x the Minimal Important Difference (MID) clinical concentration doses were tested alongside vehicle control (0.1% DMSO). Treatments were randomised across the plates and each condition tested in triplicate.
Results
Liver-48 plate microtissues were able to successfully differentiate the DILI risks of the tool compounds, using liver functionality (albumin, urea, ALT, AST) and viability (ATP) markers. The DILI profile of troglitazone was found to match those predicted by Liver-12 plate microtissues, demonstrating equivalence between the two plate types. The results of pioglitazone testing accurately predicted this compound to be safe. By assessing a range of test compounds recommended by the IQ MPS Consortium for DILI validation, the Liver-12 was able to correctly capture differing mechanisms of toxicity and mirror clinical outcomes. Oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, steatosis, dysregulation of bile acid synthesis or transport and inflammatory responses were investigated using a wide range of clinically relevant biomarkers.
Conclusions
OOC/MPS has long been considered a useful tool for better predicting human outcomes, however providing scalable throughput to meet lead optimization requirements and recoverable material at scale to enable biomarker detection sensitivity, plus deep mechanistic insights – has been a challenge. Here we demonstrate that the PhysioMimix Liver MPS can be scaled to enable specific contexts of use. By incorporating human-relevant insights into the earlier lead optimization phase of drug discovery using the Liver-48 plate facilitates the design of more refined pre-clinical studies. Conversely, when the context of use shifts from compounds screening to investigative toxicology, the Liver-12 DILI assay provides the optimal solution. Data-rich analyses from a wide range of clinically relevant biomarkers can be derived to make informed decisions to modify drug design and de-risk clinical progression of drug candidates. Together, this enables more efficient drug development and safer medicines in the future. Presenter:

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Recapitulating immune-driven hepatotoxicity using a Liver microphysiological platform

Abstract No: 3445

Poster Board: H590

Date: Tue, 24 March 2026

Time: 09:15 – 11:45

Room: Hall B

Presenter: TBC

More Info

Add to calendar

Recapitulating Immune-Driven Hepatotoxicity Using a Liver Microphysiological Platform

With the April 2025 U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) roadmap promoting New Approach Methodologies (NAMs) for regulatory testing of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) and other drugs, there is a need for models with greater complexity and human relevance. For biologics such as mAbs, immune-mediated drug-induced liver injury (iDILI) remains a significant concern in drug development. Human-specific immune system interactions with new modalities, such as therapeutic antibodies, can lead to unpredictable hepatotoxicity, which often fail to be captured in traditional animal models and high-throughput cell line models, leading to poor translational outcomes and high attrition rates. The FDA-recognised PhysioMimix® DILI assay was modified to incorporate peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) to address this with an immune-competent, human liver relevant MPS model. The model aims to enhance translational relevance and improve safety profiling in drug development pipelines.
Methods
Primary human hepatocytes were cultured under dynamic perfusion in Liver-12 plates by PhysioMimix Core to form 3D liver microtissues. The liver microtissues were analysed for functionality (CYP activity, albumin, urea) and clinically relevant injury markers (ALT, AST). Following four days of hepatocyte culture, HLA-matched PBMCs were added to the circulating media with the liver microtissues for a further four days and functionality assessed (cytokine profiling). Ipilimumab (anti-CTLA-4) or infliximab (anti-TNF-alpha) was dosed into the media of hepatocyte only and co-cultures for 48 hours and samples were taken at 1-, 4-, 8-, 24- and 48-hours post-dosing. The liver microtissues were evaluated for hepatotoxic responses while immune activation and inflammation was assessed by cytokine release.
Results
Immune cell interaction and recovery from the Liver-12 was first completed to determine the ability of the PBMC to transverse the microfluidic channels and scaffolds unhindered (60-70% recovery). Following initiation of co-culture, maintenance of liver microtissue functionality and stable immune phenotypes was demonstrated over four days of co-culture. Upon dosing with the mAbs in the co-culture model, immune-mediated hepatotoxicity was detected with significant elevation in LDH and ALT/AST, and reduction in the functional biomarkers, albumin and urea. Interestingly, significant cytokine increases were only seen in ipilimumab-treated conditions, aligning with clinical data which demonstrated a pro-inflammatory phenotype via activation of T-cells.
Conclusion
This proof-of-concept study using two clinically relevant monoclonal antibodies demonstrates the ability of the PhysioMimix DILI assay to predict immune-mediated hepatotoxicity. Future studies will look to further profile immune alterations and interactions with the liver microtissues. Together, this assay provides a human-specific solution to the assessment of hepatotoxicity of large molecules. The FDA’s endorsement of NAMs for investigational new drug (IND) applications marks a paradigm shift toward human-relevant, non-animal testing strategies, positioning the PhysioMimix® Core System as a pivotal tool for the future of immunotoxicity assessment and safer drug development. Presenter: Dr. Justina Then

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Meet the team at SOT 2026

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Paul

Dr Brooks joined CN Bio in 2022. He has over 25 years of experience in building businesses and leading high-performance research, product, marketing, and sales teams to develop and commercialize new biotechnology technologies globally for drug discovery, bioproduction and diagnostics.

Dr Brooks has held senior leadership positions in the USA and the UK, including Head of Business Operations and Managing Director of Horizon Discovery Ltd; Chief Commercial Officer and Executive Board member of Oxford Genetics Ltd; Head of Discovery Research Services at MilliporeSigma (Merck KGaA); and Global Marketing Manager at Sigma-Aldrich Corp. Dr Brooks has a BSc in Biochemistry from the University of Wales, a PhD in Molecular Biology from the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (UMIST), and an MBA from the University of Nottingham Business School.

Tom | SOT 2026

Tom

Dr Kostrzewski has more than 15 years of experience in molecular and cellular biology research. He joined CN Bio in 2015 and was promoted to Director of Biology in 2018 with responsibility for biological model development and collaborative research projects with academia, pharma, and regulators. In 2021 he was promoted to VP of Science and Technology and then to Chief Scientific Officer in 2023, with responsibility for all technical activities, including developing new products, technologies, and assays, as well as contract research services. Dr Kostrzewski has managed multiple grant-funded collaborative projects at CN Bio and is currently the project lead for the collaborative project between CN Bio and the FDA. He has published more than twelve peer-reviewed scientific articles in the last five years and submitted several patent applications.
Prior to joining CN Bio, he worked at Imperial College London in the Department of Life Sciences studying immune cell development and stem cell differentiation, as well as at GlaxoSmithKline working in biopharmaceutical drug discovery and development. Dr Kostrzewski holds three degrees from the University of Sheffield and Imperial College London in Cell and Molecular Biology.

deepak-vp-sales-marketing

Deepak

Deepak Singh joins CN Bio in February 2023. He has over 30 years of commercial experience within the life science industry, leading high-performance sales, support & marketing teams in establishing new technologies and driving global scalability of products & solutions into the markets in drug discovery, bioproduction, research and diagnostics. Deepak was previously Head of Global Commercial at Horizon Discovery Ltd (A PerkinElmer company); VP EMEA at Pacific Biosciences; Director of EMEA Sales & Marketing at Affymetrix, and Head of UK Sales for the Genetic Analysis unit of Applied Biosystems (A Perkin-Elmer company at the time).

Joe | SOT 2026

Joe

Joe Parisi is a Commercial Leader with 14 years’ experience in the life science sector. Joe joined CN Bio as the Americas Director of Sales in December 2023. He comes to CN Bio with valuable startup experience most recently at IsoPlexis and Purigen Biosystems, where he was responsible for building commercial opportunities across the US West. He was previously Sales Director at PhenomeX (now Bruker Cellular Analysis), where he managed the proteomics team in the US West focusing on capital equipment sales for single-cell functional analysis. Joe graduated from the University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana with a BSc in Molecular and Cellular Biology.

emily | SOT 2026

Emily

Dr. Emily Richardson is a Biology Group Leader at CN Bio, where she oversees the development and validation of microphysiological systems (MPS) for toxicology and safety assessment. She joined CN Bio in 2020 as a Senior Scientist and played a central role in creating the company’s Lung and Lung/Liver MPS models, advancing their use in infectious disease research and the evaluation of inhaled therapeutics.
Throughout her time at CN Bio, Dr Richardson has led multiple collaborative and grant funded programmes and acts as a key liaison across academic partners, pharmaceutical organisations, contract research organisations, regulatory bodies, and standardisation groups.
Her expertise sits at the intersection of complex cell biology and real world drug discovery, informed by industry experience in cellular therapeutics and specialism in complex in vitro modelling. She received her degree in Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine from the University of Nottingham and PhD from the University of Leicester, where she used 3D cell culture to uncover molecular mechanisms driving highly metastatic lung cancers – expertise that continues to shape her approach to developing more predictive and robust human relevant models today.

Anthony 1 1 | SOT 2026

Anthony

Dr. Anthony Berger is CN Bio’s US-based Field Application Scientist, providing support for the PhysioMimix® Organ-on-Chip benchtop platform. Anthony has an extensive research background in 3D cell culture, biomaterials, and microfluidics, focusing on how the microenvironment influences cellular decision-making. He is a proponent of complex 3D in vitro models and desires to decrease the barrier to entry of these technologies. Anthony received his BS from Indiana University (US), PhD from the University of Wisconsin (US), and completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Temple University (US).

justina BW

Justina

Dr. Justina Then is a Senior Scientist at CN Bio, focussing on liver toxicology within the R&D team. Her academic foundation includes a PhD in Experimental Medicine and Rheumatology and postdoctoral work at the William Harvey Research Institute (QMUL), where she spent her time investigating the potential of nanotechnology for drug development in rheumatoid arthritis, and synovial fibroblasts.

With 9 years in academia, and 3 years in industry, she brings a wealth of expertise to advancing biological research and practical applications.

SOT 2026 Annual Meeting and ToxExpo

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  • CN Bio to participate in 3Rs Collaborative-led project with FDA to build confidence in Liver MPS for DILI – now ISTAND accepted! January 25, 2026
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