| Literature DB >> 30072040 |
Cecilia Boreström1, Anna Jonebring2, Jing Guo3, Henrik Palmgren4, Linda Cederblad4, Anna Forslöw2, Anna Svensson2, Magnus Söderberg5, Anna Reznichenko6, Jenny Nyström7, Jaakko Patrakka8, Ryan Hicks2, Marcello Maresca2, Barbara Valastro4, Anna Collén9.
Abstract
Development of physiologically relevant cellular models with strong translatability to human pathophysiology is critical for identification and validation of novel therapeutic targets. Herein we describe a detailed protocol for generation of an advanced 3-dimensional kidney cellular model using induced pluripotent stem cells, where differentiation and maturation of kidney progenitors and podocytes can be monitored in live cells due to CRISPR/Cas9-mediated fluorescent tagging of kidney lineage markers (SIX2 and NPHS1). Utilizing these cell lines, we have refined the previously published procedures to generate a new, higher throughput protocol suitable for drug discovery. Using paraffin-embedded sectioning and whole-mount immunostaining, we demonstrated that organoids grown in suspension culture express key markers of kidney biology (WT1, ECAD, LTL, nephrin) and vasculature (CD31) within renal cortical structures with microvilli, tight junctions and podocyte foot processes visualized by electron microscopy. Additionally, the organoids resemble the adult kidney transcriptomics profile, thereby strengthening the translatability of our in vitro model. Thus, development of human nephron-like structures in vitro fills a major gap in our ability to assess the effect of potential treatment on key kidney structures, opening up a wide range of possibilities to improve clinical translation.Entities:
Keywords: glomerulus; kidney development; podocyte; proximal tubule; stem cell
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30072040 DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2018.05.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Int ISSN: 0085-2538 Impact factor: 10.612