4.7 Review

The origin and role of the renal stroma

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 148, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.199886

Keywords

Kidney development; Renal stroma; Lineage; Cortical stroma; Kidney organoid

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council, Australia [APP1136085]
  2. National Institutes of Health [UH3DK107344]
  3. Australian Research Council [DP190101705]

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The postnatal kidney is mainly composed of epithelial cells, while the developing kidney has a diverse and regionally specific gene expression in stromal cells, which tightly regulate the identity and function of epithelial cells. Although a renal stromal stem cell population exists, their role in kidney morphogenesis is still unclear.
The postnatal kidney is predominantly composed of nephron epithelia with the interstitial components representing a small proportion of the final organ, except in the diseased state. This is in stark contrast to the developing organ, which arises from the mesoderm and comprises an expansive stromal population with distinct regional gene expression. In many organs, the identity and ultimate function of an epithelium is tightly regulated by the surrounding stroma during development. However, although the presence of a renal stromal stem cell population has been demonstrated, the focus has been on understanding the process of nephrogenesis whereas the role of distinct stromal components during kidney morphogenesis is less clear. In this Review, we consider what is known about the role of the stroma of the developing kidney in nephrogenesis, where these cells come from as well as their heterogeneity, and reflect on how this information may improve human kidney organoid models.

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