| Literature DB >> 33674788 |
Linda Gijzen1, Fjodor A Yousef Yengej2,3, Frans Schutgens2,3, Marianne K Vormann1, Carola M E Ammerlaan2,3, Arnaud Nicolas1, Dorota Kurek1, Paul Vulto1, Maarten B Rookmaaker3, Henriette L Lanz1, Marianne C Verhaar3, Hans Clevers4.
Abstract
Advanced in vitro kidney models are of great importance to the study of renal physiology and disease. Kidney tubuloids can be established from primary cells derived from adult kidney tissue or urine. Tubuloids are three-dimensional multicellular structures that recapitulate tubular function and have been used to study infectious, malignant, metabolic, and genetic diseases. For tubuloids to more closely represent the in vivo kidney, they can be integrated into an organ-on-a-chip system that has a more physiological tubular architecture and allows flow and interaction with vasculature or epithelial and mesenchymal cells from other organs. Here, we describe a detailed protocol for establishing tubuloid cultures from tissue and urine (1-3 weeks), as well as for generating and characterizing tubuloid cell-derived three-dimensional tubular structures in a perfused microfluidic multi-chip platform (7 d). The combination of the two systems yields a powerful in vitro tool that better recapitulates the complexity of the kidney tubule with donor-specific properties.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33674788 DOI: 10.1038/s41596-020-00479-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Protoc ISSN: 1750-2799 Impact factor: 13.491