| Literature DB >> 25102189 |
Mireia Caralt1, Enrique Velasco2, Angel Lanas3, Pedro M Baptista3.
Abstract
Liver bioengineering has been a field of intense research and popular excitement in the past decades. It experiences great interest since the introduction of whole liver acellular scaffolds generated by perfusion decellularization (1-3). Nevertheless, the different strategies developed so far have failed to generate hepatic tissue in vitro bioequivalent to native liver tissue. Even notable novel strategies that rely on iPSC-derived liver progenitor cells potential to self-organize in association with endothelial cells in hepatic organoids are lacking critical components of the native tissue (e.g., bile ducts, functional vascular network, hepatic microarchitecture, etc) (4). Hence, it is vital to understand the strengths and short comes of our current strategies in this quest to re-create liver organogenesis in vitro. To shed some light into these issues, this review describes the different actors that play crucial roles in liver organogenesis and highlights the steps still missing to successfully generate whole livers and hepatic organoids in vitro for multiple applications.Keywords: bile duct morphogenesis; hepatoblasts; liver bioengineering; liver decellularization; liver organogenesis; liver stem cell differentiation; organ bioengineering
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25102189 PMCID: PMC4154960 DOI: 10.4161/org.29892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Organogenesis ISSN: 1547-6278 Impact factor: 2.500