| Literature DB >> 27713700 |
Fangkun Liu1, Jing Huang2, Bo Ning3, Zhixiong Liu4, Shen Chen5, Wei Zhao5.
Abstract
Patient-derived cell lines and animal models have proven invaluable for the understanding of human intestinal diseases and for drug development although both inherently comprise disadvantages and caveats. Many genetically determined intestinal diseases occur in specific tissue microenvironments that are not adequately modeled by monolayer cell culture. Likewise, animal models incompletely recapitulate the complex pathologies of intestinal diseases of humans and fall short in predicting the effects of candidate drugs. Patient-derived stem cell organoids are new and effective models for the development of novel targeted therapies. With the use of intestinal organoids from patients with inherited diseases, the potency and toxicity of drug candidates can be evaluated better. Moreover, owing to the novel clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats/CRISPR-associated protein-9 genome-editing technologies, researchers can use organoids to precisely modulate human genetic status and identify pathogenesis-related genes of intestinal diseases. Therefore, here we discuss how patient-derived organoids should be grown and how advanced genome-editing tools may be applied to research on modeling of cancer and infectious diseases. We also highlight practical applications of organoids ranging from basic studies to drug screening and precision medicine.Entities:
Keywords: inflammatory bowel disease; intestinal cancer; organoid; pluripotent stem cells
Year: 2016 PMID: 27713700 PMCID: PMC5032635 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2016.00334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Optimization of organoids for immunological research.
| Research area | Finding | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Co-culture with lymphocytes | Cancer immunotherapy | Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4 (CTLA-4) blocker relies on the microbiota in anticancer immunotherapy | |
| Co-culture with interleukin 22 (IL-22) produced by ILCs | Innate immunity and epithelial homeostasis | ILCs induce ISC regeneration and intestinal regeneration though signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) signaling | |
| Gastroid microinjection | Gastroid microbiota | GI microbiota and its effects on epithelial homeostasis, regeneration, inflammation, and gastric carcinogenesis | |
| Stem cell transplantation | Chronic inflammatory disease | Donor stem cells cure DSS colitis and remain functional for over half a year in an animal model | |