| Literature DB >> 35138500 |
Abstract
It is believed that the development of new renal replacement therapy (RRT) will increase treatment options for end-stage kidney disease and help reduce the mismatch between supply and demand. Technological advancement in the development of kidney organoids derived from pluripotent stem cells and xenotransplantation using porcine kidneys has been accelerated by a convergence of technological innovations, including the discovery of induced pluripotent stem cells and genome editing, and improvement of analysis techniques such as single-cell ribonucleic acid sequencing. Given the difficulty associated with kidney regeneration, hybrid kidneys are studied as an innovative approach that involves the use of stem cells to generate kidneys, with animal fetal kidneys used as a scaffold. Hybrid kidney technology entails the application of local chimerism for the generation of chimeric kidneys from exogenous renal progenitor cells by borrowing complex nephrogenesis programs from the developmental environment of heterologous animals. Hybrid kidneys can also utilize the urinary tract and bladder tissue of animal fetuses for urine excretion. Generating nephrons from syngeneic stem cells to increase self-cell ratio in xeno-tissues can reduce the risk of xeno-rejection. We showed that nephrons can be generated by ablation of host nephron progenitor cells (NPCs) in the nephron development region of animals and replacing them with exogenous NPCs. This progenitor cell replacement is the basis of hybrid kidney regeneration from progenitor cells using chimera technology. The goal of xeno-regenerative medicine using hybrid kidneys is to overcome serious organ shortage.Entities:
Keywords: Chimera; Development; Hybrid; Induced pluripotent stem cells; Progenitor; Regeneration
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35138500 PMCID: PMC9114015 DOI: 10.1007/s10157-022-02191-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Nephrol ISSN: 1342-1751 Impact factor: 2.617
Fig. 1Current technology of kidney generation. The technology to generate kidneys in vivo is presented in the upper section. Decellularization uses a scaffold in which cells are removed using a detergent, leaving only the extracellular matrix. Chimera technology has two strategies: blastocyst complementation using PSCs as donor cells and embryonic organ complementation using progenitor cells. In both chimera and xenotransplantation technologies, genome editing technology is applied to the heterologous tissue parts. Xenotransplantation does not utilize stem cells. The bottom row shows the technology for in vitro kidney generation. Kidney organoids derived from PSCs have been the most widely studied in recent years. The scaffold is a kidney on a chip fabricated using Device technology based on artificial substrate. There are also engineering technologies, such as wearable artificial kidneys and 3D bioprinters that aim to develop renal replacement therapy. PSCs pluripotent stem cells
Comparison of technical issues in kidney regeneration technologies
| Chimera technology | Xenotransplantation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kidney-on-a-chip | Organoid | Decellularization | Fetus organ complementation | Blastocyst complementation | ||
| Vascular structure | Not included (or rebuild) [ | Not included (or rebuild) [ | Included (rebuild/native) [ | Included (rebuild/native) [ | Included (native) [ | Included (native) [ |
| Urinary tract | Not included | Not included | Included | Included [ | Included [ | Included [ |
| Off target problem* | N/A | No**** | Unknown | No (under review) | Concern | N/A |
| Immunosuppressive regulation** | N/A | No immunosuppression*** | Low–moderate*** [ | Moderate (under review) | Moderate (assumption) | Severe |
| Main using field | In vitro | In vitro | In vivo | In vivo | In vivo | In vivo |
| Types of cells used***** | PTECs [ | PSCs [ | PSCs/differentiated cells [ | Progenitor cells [ | PSCs [ | N/A |
| Application of iPS technology | + [ | + [ | + [ | + [ | + [ | N/A |
| Application of gene editing technology | Applicable | Applicable [ | Essential technology | Essential technology | Essential technology | |
| Advantages | Recapitulate mechanical strain and fluid shear stress. [ | Composed entirely of autologous stem cells | ECM as a scaffold has bioactive substrate | The urinary tract is available and the vascular network is of recipient origin | Functional vascular network and urinary tract available | Functional vascular network and urinary tract available |
| Culture time is faster [ | High throughput experiments are possible | Native 3D structure is utilized as a scaffold | Autologous stem cell-derived parts have the potential to reduce rejection | Autologous stem cell-derived parts have the potential to reduce rejection | Existing surgical techniques for transplantation can be used | |
| Disadvantages | Mostly PTECs seeded model [ | No urinary tract; long-term maturation is hard | Recellularization is difficult in complex organs | Lack of validation in large animals | Donor cell contamination issues in the nervous system and germ line | Requires severe immunosuppressive control |
| Difficult to generate a variety of cells [ | Difficulty in increasing the size owing to a poor vascular network | A large number of cells are needed to seed an entire organ | The problem of distal interspecies barriers | The problem of distal interspecies barriers | There are concerns of zoo noses under severe immunosuppression | |
N/A not applicable; PSCs pluripotent stem cells; PTECs proximal tubular epithelial cells; ECM Extracellular matrix
*The off-target problem is contamination of recipient's central nervous system or germ line with the cell source
**Possible rejection and immunosuppressant control during clinical application
***The immune response differs depending on whether the donor kidney is of human or animal origin
****10–20% of the cells differentiated into cells other than kidney; however, contamination of the central nervous system or germ cells has not been evaluated
*****About the cell source used as donor cells
Fig. 2Nephrogenic niche composed of renal progenitor cells and nephron development. The starting point for nephron development is located under the renal capsule of fetal kidneys. This nephrogenic niche is composed of a nephron progenitor, stromal progenitor, and collecting duct progenitor (ureteric bud), which generate nephrons
Fig. 3Progenitor cell replacement and nephron regeneration by inducible ablation of nephron progenitor cells. When an exogenous NPC is transplanted into a nephrogenic niche, it commits to the niche and generates a mosaic nephron consisting of host and donor NPCs. When host NPCs are removed using the diphtheria toxin (removal agent), only donor NPCs occupy the niche, and a non-mosaic, highly pure nephron is generated. This phenomenon is termed progenitor cell replacement. NPCs nephron progenitor cells
Fig. 4Schematic representation of transplantation method for kidney regeneration using fetal organs and local chimerism. In the upper schema, kidneys are removed from the fetus and NPCs and removal agents are injected into the nephrogenic niche on the dish. Subsequently, the fetal kidney to which the bladder and ureter was connected is transplanted into the retroperitoneum of an adult rat. NPCs are replaced and nephron differentiation proceeds in the adult rat. In the lower schema, cells are injected directly into the fetus in the mother's womb and allowed to develop in the mother while NPC replacement and nephron differentiation continue in the fetus. NPCs nephron progenitor cells