| Literature DB >> 33135070 |
Chenxin Liu1, Kaiyuan Niu1, Qingzhong Xiao1,2,3.
Abstract
Vasculopathy is a pathological process occurring in the blood vessel wall, which could affect the haemostasis and physiological functions of all the vital tissues/organs and is one of the main underlying causes for a variety of human diseases including cardiovascular diseases. Current pharmacological interventions aiming to either delay or stop progression of vasculopathies are suboptimal, thus searching novel, targeted, risk-reducing therapeutic agents, or vascular grafts with full regenerative potential for patients with vascular abnormalities are urgently needed. Since first reported, pluripotent stem cells (PSCs), particularly human-induced PSCs, have open new avenue in all research disciplines including cardiovascular regenerative medicine and disease remodelling. Assisting with recent technological breakthroughs in tissue engineering, in vitro construction of tissue organoid made a tremendous stride in the past decade. In this review, we provide an update of the main signal pathways involved in vascular cell differentiation from human PSCs and an extensive overview of PSC-derived tissue organoids, highlighting the most recent discoveries in the field of blood vessel organoids as well as vascularization of other complex tissue organoids, with the aim of discussing the key cellular and molecular players in generating vascular organoids. Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Blood vessel; Embryonic stem cell; Induced pluripotent stem cell; Organoid vascularization; Pluripotent stem cell; Tissue-engineered vascular graft; Vascular disease; Vascular endothelial cell; Vascular organoid; Vascular smooth muscle cell; Vasculopathy
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 33135070 PMCID: PMC8752356 DOI: 10.1093/cvr/cvaa313
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Res ISSN: 0008-6363 Impact factor: 10.787