4.8 Article

Modeling Steatohepatitis in Humans with Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Organoids

Journal

CELL METABOLISM
Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 374-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2019.05.007

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Cincinnati Children's Research Foundation grant
  2. Mirai Program [JPMJMI18CB]
  3. PHS Grant of the Digestive Disease Research Core Center in Cincinnati [P30 DK078392]
  4. NIH/NCRR of an Institutional Clinical and Translational Science Award [UL1TR001425PHS]
  5. Takeda Science Foundation
  6. AMED [JP18fk0210037h0001, JP18bm0704025h0001]
  7. JSPS [JP18H02800]
  8. NIH [UG3 DK119982]
  9. JST PRESTO grant

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Human organoid systems recapitulate in vivo organ architecture yet fail to capture complex pathologies such as inflammation and fibrosis. Here, using 11 different healthy and diseased pluripotent stem cell lines, we developed a reproducible method to derive multi-cellular human liver organoids composed of hepatocyte-, stellate-, and Kupffer-like cells that exhibit transcriptomic resemblance to in vivo-derived tissues. Under free fatty acid treatment, organoids, but not reaggregated cocultured spheroids, recapitulated key features of steatohepatitis, including steatosis, inflammation, and fibrosis phenotypes in a successive manner. Interestingly, an organoid-level biophysical readout with atomic force microscopy demonstrated that organoid stiffening reflects the fibrosis severity. Furthermore, organoids from patients with genetic dysfunction of lysosomal acid lipase phenocopied severe steatohepatitis, rescued by FXR agonismmediated reactive oxygen species suppression. The presented key methodology and preliminary results offer a new approach for studying a personalized basis for inflammation and fibrosis in humans, thus facilitating the discovery of effective treatments.

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