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Cellular extrusion bioprinting improves kidney organoid reproducibility and conformation
- Source :
- Nature materials
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- Directed differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells to kidney organoids brings the prospect of drug screening, disease modelling and the generation of tissue for renal replacement. Currently, these applications are hampered by organoid variability, nephron immaturity, low throughput and limited scale. Here, we apply extrusion-based three-dimensional cellular bioprinting to deliver rapid and high-throughput generation of kidney organoids with highly reproducible cell number and viability. We demonstrate that manual organoid generation can be replaced by 6- or 96-well organoid bioprinting and evaluate the relative toxicity of aminoglycosides as a proof of concept for drug testing. In addition, three-dimensional bioprinting enables precise manipulation of biophysical properties, including organoid size, cell number and conformation, with modification of organoid conformation substantially increasing nephron yield per starting cell number. This facilitates the manufacture of uniformly patterned kidney tissue sheets with functional proximal tubular segments. Hence, automated extrusion-based bioprinting for kidney organoid production delivers improvements in throughput, quality control, scale and structure, facilitating in vitro and in vivo applications of stem cell-derived human kidney tissue.
- Subjects :
- Pluripotent Stem Cells
kidney
02 engineering and technology
Nephron
010402 general chemistry
01 natural sciences
Article
Kidney Tubules, Proximal
Directed differentiation
In vivo
Organoid
medicine
Humans
General Materials Science
pluripotent stem cell
Induced pluripotent stem cell
Kidney
3D bioprinting
kidney organoid
Tissue Engineering
Chemistry
Mechanical Engineering
nephrotoxicity
Bioprinting
Reproducibility of Results
Human kidney
General Chemistry
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
Condensed Matter Physics
0104 chemical sciences
Cell biology
Disease modelling
Organoids
medicine.anatomical_structure
Mechanics of Materials
0210 nano-technology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14764660
- Volume :
- 20
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nature materials
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5cbba716b3b4ff786b3128d1a4e2ce2d