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Indian scientists recreate key human placenta functions on a chip

08 Jul 2026
2 min

Development of Placenta-on-Chip in India

The placenta, an often overlooked yet crucial organ, serves as the lifeline for the fetus during pregnancy by delivering oxygen and nutrients, removing waste, and producing essential pregnancy hormones. Despite its importance, its complex nature has made it difficult to study directly during pregnancy.

Placenta-on-Chip Technology

  • Researchers from ICMR-National Institute for Research on Women's Health (ICMR-NIRWoH), along with IIT Bombay, developed a placenta-on-chip platform.
  • Published in Biofabrication, this study introduces a microphysiological system that mimics the maternal-fetal interface.
  • The chip reproduces key functionalities of the placenta such as hormone production, nutrient transfer, and waste exchange.
  • It effectively models conditions like gestational diabetes, showing promise for studying pregnancy complications and how medicines interact with the placental barrier.

Design and Adoption

  • Unlike many existing systems, the Indian platform is designed to be simple, scalable, and compatible with conventional laboratory setups.
  • Led by Professor Abhijit Majumder, the engineering design and fabrication emphasize ease of integration into standard labs to facilitate wider research adoption.

Interdisciplinary Collaboration

  • The project is a collaboration between engineers and biomedical scientists incorporating reproductive biology, microengineering, and cell biology.
  • According to Dr. Sourav Mukherjee, such teamwork is essential for developing advanced human-relevant models that may reduce dependence on animal studies.

Impacts and Future Prospects

  • Advanced human-cell-based systems like the placenta-on-chip could help evaluate drug safety during pregnancy and provide insights into conditions like fetal growth restriction and pre-eclampsia.
  • Director Dr. Geetanjali Sachdeva highlights that the work aligns with global efforts to create predictive alternatives to animal experimentation, enhancing India's biomedical innovation capabilities.

Explore Related Content

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RELATED TERMS

3

Pre-eclampsia

A serious pregnancy complication characterized by high blood pressure and signs of damage to other organ systems, most often the liver and kidneys. It typically occurs after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

Fetal Growth Restriction (FGR)

A condition where a fetus does not grow at a normal rate within the uterus. It can be caused by various factors affecting the mother, placenta, or fetus itself.

Gestational Diabetes

A type of diabetes that develops during pregnancy in women who did not have diabetes before pregnancy. It can affect both the mother and the baby's health.

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