| Literature DB >> 32867371 |
Cristina Olgasi1, Alessia Cucci1, Antonia Follenzi1.
Abstract
Liver transplantation is the most common treatment for patients suffering from liver failure that is caused by congenital diseases, infectious agents, and environmental factors. Despite a high rate of patient survival following transplantation, organ availability remains the key limiting factor. As such, research has focused on the transplantation of different cell types that are capable of repopulating and restoring liver function. The best cellular mix capable of engrafting and proliferating over the long-term, as well as the optimal immunosuppression regimens, remain to be clearly well-defined. Hence, alternative strategies in the field of regenerative medicine have been explored. Since the discovery of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) that have the potential of differentiating into a broad spectrum of cell types, many studies have reported the achievement of iPSCs differentiation into liver cells, such as hepatocytes, cholangiocytes, endothelial cells, and Kupffer cells. In parallel, an increasing interest in the study of self-assemble or matrix-guided three-dimensional (3D) organoids have paved the way for functional bioartificial livers. In this review, we will focus on the recent breakthroughs in the development of iPSCs-based liver organoids and the major drawbacks and challenges that need to be overcome for the development of future applications.Entities:
Keywords: Kupffer cells; cholangiocytes; endothelial cells; hepatocytes; iPSCs; liver bud; liver disease; liver organoids
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32867371 PMCID: PMC7503935 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21176215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic reproduction of the liver structure. Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs) surround the hepatic sinusoids. The space of Disse separates hepatocytes and endothelial cells and contains the stellate cells. Hepatic macrophages (Kupffer cells) are in tight contact with LSECs and face the bloodstream. Cholangiocytes line the inner space of the bile duct tree.
Figure 2Differentiation methods of liver cells from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). iPSCs can be induced to mesoderm or endoderm by adding to the culture medium different cytokines. The differentiation process involves the precursor formation, specifically hepatoblast for hepatocytes and cholangiocytes, angioblast for endothelial cells and monocytes for Kupffer cells. FGF2, Fibroblast Growth Factor 2; BMP4, Bone Morphogenic Protein 4; VEGF, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor; SCF, Stem Cell Factor; MCSF, Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor; IL3, Interleukin 3; HGF, Hepatocyte Growth Factor; EGF, Epidermal Growth Factor; IL6, Interleukin 6; TGFβ, Transforming Growth Factor β.
Figure 3Methods for iPSCs-derived liver organoid generation. (A) Co-culture method by using endothelial cells, mesenchymal cells and iPSCs-derived hepatoblasts. After an initial aggregation step, several cytokines are added to the culture medium for organoid generation. (B) Organoids generated entirely from iPSCs derived cells. iPSCs-derived hepatoblast aggregates are dissociated, cultured in matrigel in presence of several cytokines and differentiate into liver organoids containing cholangiocytes and hepatocytes. (C) “Liver-on-a-chip” methods imply the culture of iPSCs-derived embryoid bodies or primary liver cells on chip in matrix or matrix independent conditions to induce organoid aggregation. (D) Three-dimensional (3D) printing technology implies the use of gelatin-methacryloyl Hydrogels as ink where primary hepatic cells are included and printed in transwells or perfused microwells.
Summary of studies on the generation of iPSC-derived liver organoids.
| Methodology | Author | Approach | In Vivo Transplantation and Survival | Advancement | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Takebe et al. | Co-culture of iPSCs-derived hepatic endoderm like cells with mesenchymal and human umbilical vein endothelial cells | Transplantation in TK-NOG mice after induced liver failure: survival up to 30 days | Vascularization of liver bud organoids and maturation in hepatocytes after in vivo transplantation | [ |
| Asai et al. | Co-culture of hepatic-specified endoderm iPSCs with mesenchymal and human umbilical vein endothelial cells | Implantation under the kidney capsule of immunodeficient mice: high serum levels of human albumin up to 8 weeks and hepatic maturation of the liver organoid in vivo | Paracrine factors secreted by mesenchymal cells and ECs (HGF, ANG, A2M, PLG) induce the formation of liver organoids | [ | |
| Pettinato et al. | Co-culture of iPSCs-derived embryoid bodies with Human Adipose Microvascular Endothelial Cells (HAMEC) | An immune-deficient rat model for acute liver failure was transplanted with iPSCs-derived embryoid bodies + HAMEC: survival rate of 66.7% 14 days after induction of liver failure | The addition of HAMEC during hepatic differentiation of iPSCs induces liver-specific gene expression improving hepatic cell functionality | [ | |
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| Koui et al. | iPSCs were differentiated into LSECs and hepatic stem cells by modulating TGFβ and Rho signaling pathways | ND | Self-renewal properties of iPSCs derived liver cells in 2D culture systems | [ |
| Wu et al. | iPSCs were differentiated into hepatobiliary organoids using Activin A, BMP4, BMP2, FGF4, HGF, OSM and dexamethasone | Hepatobiliary organoids were transplanted under the splenic capsule of immune-deficient mice: 4 weeks after transplantation biliary duct-like structures positive for human albumin were identified; 8 weeks after transplantation the hepatic structure was almost lost | By differentiating iPSCs into hepatobiliary organoids, there is no requirement of supportive cells, thus reducing costs and avoiding immune-rejection | [ | |
| Guan et al. |
iPSC-derived hepatic organoids containing both hepatocytes and cholangiocytes. CRISPR-Cas9 technology and piggyBac transposon system were combined to introduce and revert a mutation causing Alagille syndrome in healthy and patient derived iPSCs. | ND |
The hepatic organoids generated showed biosynthetic and drug biotransformation properties similar to the human liver. The organoid after genome edited can be used for disease modeling and biology | [ | |
| Ouchi et al. | First iPSCs were differentiated into foregut spheroids and then, in the presence of a hepatocyte specific medium, into a liver organoid containing hepatocytes, Kupffer, stellate and biliary cells | ND | The obtained organoids showed a transcriptomic profile comparable to hepatic tissue | [ | |
| Toh et al., Jang et al., Zhu et al. | Hepatocytes or embryoid bodies were cultured in microfluidic 3D hepatocyte chip on collagen, Matrigel or hydrogel | ND | Matrices support the formation of 3D aggregates and can be used for drug testing | [ | |
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| Norona et al., Nguyen et al., Bhise et al., Moya et al., Grix et al. | Gelatin-methacryloyl Hydrogels are used as ink. Primary hepatic cells were printed in transwell microwells to induce the generation of a 3D liver | ND | The coating of microfluidic chips supports the formation of 3D aggregates | [ |
|
| Goulart et al. | Bio compatible ink were used to print iPSC-derived parenchymal and non-parenchymal cells to generate a 3D liver organoid | ND | 3D liver organoid showed hepatic functions | [ |
HGF, Hepatocyte Growth Factor; ANG, angiotensinogen; A2M, α-2 macroglobulin; PLG, plasminogen; LSECs, Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells; TGFβ, Transforming Growth Factor β; BMP4, Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4; BMP2, Bone Morphogenetic Protein 2; FGF4, Fibroblast Growth Factor 4; OSM, Oncostatin M.
Summary of studies on liver organoid applications in regenerative medicine.
| Author | Approach | Disease Mouse Model | Reconstitution | Follow Up | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huch et al. | Bile-duct derived organoids from Lgr5+ stem cells | Fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (FAH)−/− mutant mice (model for Tyrosinemia type I liver disease) | 0.1% of total liver volume | 60–90 days | [ |
| Huch et al. | EpCAM+ ductal cells from human liver biopsies induced to differentiate in hepatocytes and to form organoids | Balb/c nude mice treated with CCl4-retrorsine to induce acute liver damage | 50–100 ng/mL of blood human albumin levels | 120 days | [ |
| Hu et al. | 3D organoids from mouse and human primary hepatocytes | Fah−/− NOD Rag1−/− Il2rg−/− (FNRG) mice (model of tyrosinemia type I) | 200 µg/mL on average of blood human albumin levels | 90 days | [ |
| Rashidi et al. | Organoid from iPSC-derived hepatocytes | Fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (FAH)−/− mutant mice (model for Tyrosinemia type I liver disease) and Fah−/− NOD Rag1−/− Il2rg−/− (FNRG) mice (model tyrosinemia type I) | Detectable levels of human albumin | 14 days | [ |
| Blackford et al. | iPSC-derived hepatocytes generated with a cGMP compliant method was established to generate and seeded on a 3D poly-ethylene glycol-diacrylate scaffold to generate an organoid | Immune competent (C57BL/6 and Crl:CD1) and immune deficient (Rag2γ) mice | Detectable levels of human albumin | 12 days | [ |
Summary of studies on liver organoid applications as disease modeling.
| Author | Approach | Disease model | Gene | Aim | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sampaziotis et al. | Human iPSCs from healthy donors and cystic fibrosis patients were differentiated into cholangiocyte-like cells | Cystic fibrosis associated biliary disease | Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator gene (CFTR) | To test the effects of the drug VX809 on organoids | [ |
| Guan et al. | iPSCs from healthy donors and Alagille syndrome patients were differentiated into 3D human hepatic organoids | Alagille syndrome | JAG1 |
To model Alagille syndrome. To introduce and revert JAG1 mutation with CRISPR/Cas9 technology and piggyBac transposon system. | [ |
| Akbani et al. | iPSC-derived-EpCAM-positive endodermal cells differentiated into hepatic organoids | Citrullinemia type 1 | Argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS1) gene |
To model Citrullinemia type 1. To introduce the functional form of ASS1 by lentiviral vector transduction | [ |
| Nie et al. | Human iPSC-derived endodermal, mesenchymal, and endothelial cells were cultured in specific medium to obtain liver organoids | Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection | ND |
To infect organoids from healthy iPSCs with HBV. To use infected organoids as a model of HBV infection. | [ |
Summary of studies on liver organoid applications as liver tumors.
| Starting Material | Author | Approach | Aim | Result | Limitation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Takai et al. | Hepatocellular carcinoma cells cultured in porous alginate scaffolds generated spheroids | Mimic numerous features of glandular epithelium | Mimic numerous features of glandular epithelium | Tumor microenvironment interactions are not recapitulated | [ |
|
| Broutier et al. | PDX organoids from HCC | Drug sensitivity experiment | ERK inhibition could have an effect of HCC progression | Not suitable for immunotherapeutic approaches | [ |
| Gu et al. | PDX organoids from HCC | To generate a cohort of liver cancers to test a multi-kinase inhibitor | The drug was effective and used as a treatment for patients with advanced HCC | Not suitable for immunotherapeutic approaches | [ | |
| Nie et al. | PDX organoids from HCC | To generate a cohort of liver cancers containing information about the expression profiles and the genetic alterations of all considered tumors | Identification of biomarkers for personalized medicine | Not suitable for immunotherapeutic approaches | [ | |
| Saito et al. | PDX organoids from cholangiocarcinoma cells | To demonstrate that cholangiocarcinoma derives from differentiated hepatocytes | Restored hepatic functions | Not suitable for immunotherapeutic approaches | [ | |
|
| Jiang et al. | HCC PDXs were generated in NSG gamma null mice repopulated with CAR-T cells | To study cancer immunotherapy | CAR-T cells directed against an HCC tumor-associated antigen suppressed tumor growth | Low engraftment of hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow of transplanted mice | [ |
| Choi et al. | HCCs generated in NSG mice with human leukocyte antigen-matched human immune systems | To study cancer immunotherapy | Organoids models were responsive to immunotherapies | Low engraftment of hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow of transplanted mice | [ | |
|
| Artegiani et al. | healthy iPSCs or normal tissues | Introduce BAP1 and cholangiocarcinoma mutations by CRIPSR Cas9 | Acquisition of malignant features | - | [ |