4.3 Review

Human reconstructed kidney models

Journal

IN VITRO CELLULAR & DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY-ANIMAL
Volume 57, Issue 2, Pages 133-147

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11626-021-00548-8

Keywords

In vitro; In vivo; Kidney; Pluripotent stem cells; Organoid; 3D culture system; Organ-on-a-chip; Single-cell RNA sequencing

Funding

  1. Takeda Science Foundation [19K17745]

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The human kidney is vital for functions like blood filtration, electrolyte balance, pH regulation, and fluid balance. While animal experiments and genetic technology have been key in studying kidney injury, differences between animal and human kidneys have led scientists to develop more relevant models. Tissue culture studies provide valuable insights into kidney injury, but lack the complexity of the kidney's architecture and multicellular relationships. Pluripotent stem cells have been used to generate kidney organoids, which mimic the complexity of the kidney and have the potential to more accurately model kidney diseases and predict drug toxicity.
The human kidney, which consists of up to 2 million nephrons, is critical for blood filtration, electrolyte balance, pH regulation, and fluid balance in the body. Animal experiments, particularly mice and rats, combined with advances in genetically modified technology have been the primary mechanism to study kidney injury in recent years. Mouse or rat kidneys, however, differ substantially from human kidneys at the anatomical, histological, and molecular levels. These differences combined with increased regulatory hurdles and shifting attitudes towards animal testing by non-specialists have led scientists to develop new and more relevant models of kidney injury. Although in vitro tissue culture studies are a valuable tool to study kidney injury and have yielded a great deal of insight, they are not a perfect model. Perhaps, the biggest limitation of tissue culture is that it cannot replicate the complex architecture, consisting of multiple cell types, of the kidney, and the interplay between these cells. Recent studies have found that pluripotent stem cells (PSCs), which are capable of differentiation into any cell type, can be used to generate kidney organoids. Organoids recapitulate the multicellular relationships and microenvironments of complex organs like kidney. Kidney organoids have been used to successfully model nephrotoxin-induced tubular and glomerular disease as well as complex diseases such as chronic kidney disease (CKD), which involves multiple cell types. In combination with genetic engineering techniques, such as CRISPR-Cas9, genetic diseases of the kidney can be reproduced in organoids. Thus, organoid models have the potential to predict drug toxicity and enhance drug discovery for human disease more accurately than animal models.

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