| Literature DB >> 33580825 |
Cindrilla Chumduri1,2, Margherita Y Turco3,4.
Abstract
Healthy functioning of the female reproductive tract (FRT) depends on balanced and dynamic regulation by hormones during the menstrual cycle, pregnancy and childbirth. The mucosal epithelial lining of different regions of the FRT-ovaries, fallopian tubes, uterus, cervix and vagina-facilitates the selective transport of gametes and successful transfer of the zygote to the uterus where it implants and pregnancy takes place. It also prevents pathogen entry. Recent developments in three-dimensional (3D) organoid systems from the FRT now provide crucial experimental models that recapitulate the cellular heterogeneity and physiological, anatomical and functional properties of the organ in vitro. In this review, we summarise the state of the art on organoids generated from different regions of the FRT. We discuss the potential applications of these powerful in vitro models to study normal physiology, fertility, infections, diseases, drug discovery and personalised medicine.Entities:
Keywords: Cancers; Female reproductive tract; Fertility; Infection; Organoids; Pregnancy; Reproductive health
Year: 2021 PMID: 33580825 PMCID: PMC8026429 DOI: 10.1007/s00109-020-02028-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Med (Berl) ISSN: 0946-2716 Impact factor: 4.599
Fig. 1Anatomy of the human and mouse FRT. In humans, the FRT consists of ovaries, fallopian tubes, uterus (endometrium and myometrium), cervix (endocervix and ectocervix) and vagina. There are some anatomical differences between the two species, as mice have a bicornuate uterus (uterine horns) and oviducts are much less pronounced in proportion to the rest of the reproductive tract
Fig. 2The menstrual cycle. The pituitary and ovarian hormones regulating the menstrual cycle and the morphological changes occurring at the ovarian surface epithelium (OSE) and endometrium are depicted. The menstrual phase is divided into menstrual, proliferative and secretory phases. During the proliferative phase, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) promotes the growth of ovarian follicles. This results in rising levels of oestrogen (E2) produced by the follicles which then drives the proliferation of the functional layer of the endometrium. Mid-cycle, a peak in E2 results in a surge of luteinizing hormone (LH) and the release of the oocyte (ovulation). This marks the start of the secretory phase, dominated by progesterone (P4), which drives the differentiation (decidualisation) of the endometrium to prepare for implantation. In the absence of implantation, P4 levels drop triggering menstruation, the shedding of the functional layer, to restart the cycle. The basal layer is not shed
Fig. 3The epithelia of the human FRT. The types of epithelia covering the different regions of the human FRT are illustrated. For each tissue the major cell types are shown, with examples of typical markers they express. Markers with an asterisk are hormonally regulated
Fig. 4Organoids of normal and diseased tissues of the human FRT. Organoid models derived from normal and pathological tissues are illustrated. The different cell types that are present in the tissue epithelia and the organoids are shown as columnar (non-ciliated), secretory, ciliated, cuboidal and squamous. The organoids recapitulate cellular heterogeneity, genetic signature and key functions of the tissue of origin
Media components for the derivation and propagation of organoids from healthy and diseased human and mouse FRT. The growth factors and inhibitors required for the establishment of organoid cultures as well as their expansion for at least 10 passages are summarized. For each region of the FRT, organoids derived from healthy and pathological tissues are listed
| FRT | Specie | Tissue source | Organoid mediuma | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ovary | Human | Ovarian tissue from prophylactic bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (with/without | Wnt3a CM, Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin CM, EGF, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Y-27632, NRG1, Forskolin, Hydrocortisone, β-Estradiol | [ |
| Human | Ovarian carcinoma (low and high grade serous adenocarcinoma, mucinous adenocarcinoma, clear cell carcinoma, endometrioid carcinoma, serous borderline tumour) | Wnt3a CMb, Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin CM, EGF, FGF10, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Y-27632, NRG1, Forskolin, Hydrocortisone, β-Estradiol | [ | |
| Human | High-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (primary tumour deposits within abdominal cavity) | Wnt3a CMc, Rspondin-1 CMc, CHIR99021c, Nogginc, BMP2c, EGF, FGF10c, Nicotinamide, SB431542, Y-27632, | [ | |
| Human | Ovarian carcinoma (low and high grade serous adenocarcinoma, mucinous adenocarcinoma, clear cell carcinoma) | Rspondin-1 rec/CM, Noggin rec/CM, EGF, FGF10c, FGF2c, IGF1c, HGFc, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Y-27632d, NRG1c, SB203580, β-Estradiol | [ | |
| Mouse | Ovarian tissue | Wnt3a CM, Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin, EGF, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Hydrocortisone, β-Estradiol | [ | |
| Fallopian tube | Human | Anatomically normal FT tissue (removed for benign gynaecological diseases) | Wnt3a CM, Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin, Nicotinamide, EGF, FGF10, Y-27632, SB431542 | [ |
| Human | FT tissue from prophylactic bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (with/without | Wnt3a CM, Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin CM, Nicotinamide, EGF, A83-01, Y-27632 | [ | |
| Mouse | FT fimbriae | Wnt3a CM, Rspondin-1 rec/CM, Noggin, EGF, Y-27632e | [ | |
| Mouse | FT tissue | Wnt3af, Rspondin-1f, Nogginf, EGF, FGF10f, SB431542, Y-27632 | [ | |
| Endometrium | Human | Endometrial biopsies (proliferative, secretory and postmenopausal phases); decidual tissue (first trimester termination samples, 6–9 weeks gestation from normal pregnancy) | Rspondin-1, Noggin, EGF, FGF10, HGF, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Y-27632g | [ |
| Human | Endometrial biopsies in proliferative phase (laparoscopy for benign gynaecological conditions) | Wnt3a CM, Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin, EGF, FGF10, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Y-27632d, SB202190, β-Estradiol | [ | |
| Human | Decidua (first trimester termination samples, 8–11 weeks gestation from normal pregnancy) | Rspondin-1, CHIR99021, Noggin, EGF, A83-01, PGE2 | [ | |
| Human | Endometrial tissue (menstrual, proliferative, secretory phases) | Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin rec/CM, EGF, FGF2, FGF10, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Y-276322d, SB202190, β-Estradiol | [ | |
| Human | Ectopic (stages I–IV) and eutopic endometrium (proliferative, secretory phases) from endometriosis | Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin rec/CM, EGF, FGF2, FGF10, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Y-276322c, SB202190, β-Estradiol | [ | |
| Human | Endometrial hyperplasia (simple benign, complex atypia, Lynch syndrome) | Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin rec/CM, EGF, FGF2, FGF10, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Y-276322d, SB202190, β-Estradiol | [ | |
| Human | Endometrioid, clear cell, serous endometrial carcinoma (grades I–III) | Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin rec/CM, EGF, IGF1, HGF, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Y-27632d, SB202190, β Estradiol | [ | |
| Mouse | Uterine horns (estrous phase) | Wnt3a CM, Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin, EGF, FGF10, Nicotinamide, A83-01, Y-27632d | [ | |
| Cervix | Human | Anatomically normal endocervical biopsies | Wnt3a CM, Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin, EGF, FGF10, Nicotinamide, SB431542, Y-27632 | [ |
| Human | Anatomically normal ectocervical biopsies | Noggin, EGF, FGF10, Nicotinamide, SB431542, Y-27632, Forskolin, Hydrocortisone | [ | |
| Mouse | Endocervical tissue | Wnt3a CM, Rspondin-1 CM, Noggin, EGF, FGF10, Nicotinamide, Y-27633, SB431542 | [ | |
| Mouse | Ectocervical tissue | Noggin, EGF, FGF10, Nicotinamide, SB431542, Y-27632 | [ | |
| Vagina | Mouse | Vaginal tissue | EGF, A83-01, Y-27632, Ultraserum-G | [ |
FT fallopian tube, CM conditioned medium, rec recombinant, EGF epidermal growth factor, FGF fibroblast growth factor, HGF hepatocyte growth factor, A83-01 TGFβ receptor inhibitor, NRG1 neuregulin 1, SB431542 TGFβ receptor inhibitor, SB202190 p38 MAPK inhibitor, SB203580 p38 MAPK inhibitor, Y-27632 ROCK inhibitor, CHIR99021 GSK-3 inhibitor, PGE2 prostaglandin E2
aExcluding basal medium components (i.e. advanced DMEM/F12, N2, B27, insulin-transferrin-selenium (ITS), Glutamax, N-acetylcysteine, antibiotics, HEPES); all factors are recombinant if not designated ‘CM’
bSome tumour organoids require Wnt3a CM
cSupplementation/omission of these factors depends on the sample
dSupplementation only for initiation of organoid cultures or after passaging
eSupplement for recovery of organoids after thawing
fNot essential for long-term culture but results in more mature organoids
gSupplement for derivation and expansion of clonal organoid cultures or for recovery of organoids after thawing
Fig. 5Future applications of organoids of the FRT. Organoids of the FRT are derived from biopsies and can be used to study tissue biology, cell-cell interactions, host-pathogen interactions and disease. Tissue engineering methods combine organoids with other cell types to develop more tissue-like models that include non-epithelial cells. Organoids derived from pathological tissues are useful for drug screening for personalised medicine