| Literature DB >> 32221645 |
Anastasia Tsakmaki1, Patricia Fonseca Pedro1, Gavin A Bewick2.
Abstract
Diabetes is one of the most challenging health concerns facing society. Available drugs treat the symptoms but there is no cure. This presents an urgent need to better understand human diabetes in order to develop improved treatments or target remission. New disease models need to be developed that more accurately describe the pathology of diabetes. Organoid technology provides an opportunity to fill this knowledge gap. Organoids are 3D structures, established from pluripotent stem cells or adult stem/progenitor cells, that recapitulate key aspects of the in vivo tissues they mimic. In this review we briefly introduce organoids and their benefits; we focus on organoids generated from tissues important for glucose homeostasis and tissues associated with diabetic complications. We hope this review serves as a touchstone to demonstrate how organoid technology extends the research toolbox and can deliver a step change of discovery in the field of diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: 3D culture; Beta cells; Diabetes; Diabetic complications; Disease modelling; Glucose homeostasis; Obesity; Organoids; Review; Stem cells
Year: 2020 PMID: 32221645 PMCID: PMC7228904 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-020-05126-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.122
Fig. 1Organoid generation and applications. Organoids can be generated from multiple species and multiple tissues. There are two general sources: adult tissue-resident stem cells (ASCs) and pluripotent stem cells (PSCs). Generation of PSC-derived organoids requires directed differentiation towards the tissue of interest, whereas those derived from ASCs do not. Both sources require specific niche factors and an extracellular matrix (ECM) in which they form 3D multicellular organoids mimicking the tissue of interest. The schematic shows archetypal intestinal organoid development; the different colours indicate different cell types. Both types of organoid can be utilised in many downstream methods, as shown (this list is not exhaustive). BME, Basement Membrane Extract; diff., differentiation; FACS, fluorescence-activated cell sorting; HTS, high-throughput screening. This figure is available as part of a downloadable slideset
Fig. 2Mini-me: modelling diabetes in 3D. Diabetes is a multi-organ disease and organoids present an opportunity to generate models that more closely recapitulate its pathology. (a) Organoids can be generated from multiple tissues to allow the modelling of disease progression, investigation of genetic associations, screening of drugs and probing of mechanisms. (b) In the future, combining organoid technology and bioengineering may make it possible to model inter-organ communication in diabetes pathogenesis, creating a virtual diabetic patient on a chip. The image in (b) is adapted from [107], with permission from Elsevier. This figure is available as part of a downloadable slideset