| Literature DB >> 34208902 |
Xv Zhang1, Liling Tang1, Qian Yi2.
Abstract
The vasculature of stem-cell-derived liver organoids can be engineered using methods that recapitulate embryonic liver development. Hepatic organoids with a vascular network offer great application prospects for drug screening, disease modeling, and therapeutics. However, the application of stem cell-derived organoids is hindered by insufficient vascularization and maturation. Here, we review different theories about the origin of hepatic cells and the morphogenesis of hepatic vessels to provide potential approaches for organoid generation. We also review the main protocols for generating vascularized liver organoids from stem cells and consider their potential and limitations in the generation of vascularized liver organoids.Entities:
Keywords: endothelial cells; liver organoids; maturation; stem cells; vascularization
Year: 2021 PMID: 34208902 PMCID: PMC8301828 DOI: 10.3390/biom11070966
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1The origin of hepatic endothelial cells. (a) At E9.5, the liver diverticulum is surrounded by the omphalomesenteric veins, posterior cardinal veins, or common cardinal veins. (b) At E8.5, the liver at budding stage is located in the portion of the ventral foregut endoderm, which is adjacent to the sinus venosus endocardium.
Figure 2Overview of the protocol for the generation of a hepatic lobule array. Kang et al. fabricated a preset cartridge and injected hepatocyte-laden bioinks, ECs-laden bioinks, and cell-free bioinks into it to imbed HepG2/C3A and ECs. Then, they removed the alginate bioink to form a lumen. After incubation at 37 °C, ECs covered the outside of the construct, forming a lumen in which ECs were lined and interconnected between the exterior and the lumen.
Summary of the current published protocols for the vascularization of liver organoids.
| Method | Material | Vascularization Strategy | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Self-organization in well arrays | iPSC-HE cells, HUVECs, and BMSCs | Coculture of HUVEC, MSCs, and hPSC-derived hepatic progenitors. MSC-driven condensation on Matrigel | [ |
| Feeder-free human iPSCs | Coculture of iEC, iMSCs, and hiPSC-derived hepatic progenitors | [ | |
| HAMECs and hiPSCs | EB differentiation of hepatic cells in the presence of HAMEC | [ | |
| MSCs, MSC-derived hepatocytes, and HSC- and LSEC-like cells | Coculture of MSCs, MSC-derived hepatocytes, and HSC- and LSEC-like cells MSC-driven condensation on Matrigel | [ | |
| LPCs and LSECs | Coculture of LPCs and LSECs | [ | |
| Lentivirus vector, hiPSCs, and primary human hepatocytes | Engineering of GRN by lentiviral transduction | [ | |
| Three-dimensional bioprinting | HepG2/C3A cells, EA.hy 926 cells, fabricated alginate solution for cell-laden bioinks and sacrificial materials, lyophilized Atelocollagen, and gelatin powder to form scaffold | Embedding of ECs on a lobule structure with microchannel built by sacrificial material to form an endothelium-lined lumen | [ |
| Liver-bud-like spheroids generated by mature hepatocytes, HUVECs, and MSCs | Coculture of mature hepatocytes, HUVECs, and MSCs | [ | |
| HepaRG cells, sodium alginate solution, and gelatin solution for bioink | In vivo perfusion after transplantation | [ | |
| Decellularization | Liver tissue from mice, rats, ferrets, rabbits, and pigs, 1% Triton-X 100 with 0.1% ammonium hydroxide for decellularization, HUVECs, hFLCs | Seeding ECs on the decellularized liver with a vascular network | [ |
| Porcine liver harvested from 5 to 8 kg piglets, 1% Triton X-100 and 0.1% ammonium hydroxide in distilled water for decellularization, rat anti-mouse CD31 antibody to improve re-endothelialization, and vascular endothelial cells expressing GFP protein (MS1) | Seeding ECs on the decellularized liver with a vascular network | [ | |
| Porcine livers collected from adult pigs (40–50 kg), 1% Triton X-100 and 0.1% ammonium hydroxide in distilled water for decellularization, HG mixture to improve re-endothelialization, human EA.hy926 endothelial cells, hepatic carcinoma cells (HepG2 cells) | Seeding ECs on the decellularized liver with a vascular network | [ | |
| In vivo transplantation | LBs generated from iPSC-HE cells, HUVECs and BMSCs, immunodeficient mice as hosts | Blood perfusion in host body after transplantation | [ |
| LBs generated from LPCs and LSECs, using Fah-/-/Rag2-/-/Il2rg-/- mice as hosts | Blood perfusion in host body after transplantation | [ | |
| LOU prepared from human liver or 2-week-old ActinGFP mice, NOD/SCID γ host mice as hosts | Blood perfusion in host body after transplantation | [ |