4.6 Article

In vitro grafting of hepatic spheroids and organoids on a microfluidic vascular bed

Journal

ANGIOGENESIS
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 455-470

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10456-022-09842-9

Keywords

In vitro grafting; Vascularization; Liver organoids and spheroids; Microfluidics

Funding

  1. European Union [848429, 641639, 812616]
  2. Interreg, project Biomat on microfluidic chip 433
  3. Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate [IK17088]
  4. Regenerative Medicine Crossing Borders
  5. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [641639] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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This study introduces a platform for routine grafting of liver and other tissues on an in vitro grown microvascular bed. The platform allows the formation of a stable, perfusable vascular network by inducing angiogenesis between two main lateral vessels. It has the potential to replace animals with an in vitro alternative for routine grafting of spheroids, organoids, or (patient-derived) explants.
With recent progress in modeling liver organogenesis and regeneration, the lack of vasculature is becoming the bottleneck in progressing our ability to model human hepatic tissues in vitro. Here, we introduce a platform for routine grafting of liver and other tissues on an in vitro grown microvascular bed. The platform consists of 64 microfluidic chips patterned underneath a 384-well microtiter plate. Each chip allows the formation of a microvascular bed between two main lateral vessels by inducing angiogenesis. Chips consist of an open-top microfluidic chamber, which enables addition of a target tissue by manual or robotic pipetting. Upon grafting a liver microtissue, the microvascular bed undergoes anastomosis, resulting in a stable, perfusable vascular network. Interactions with vasculature were found in spheroids and organoids upon 7 days of co-culture with space of Disse-like architecture in between hepatocytes and endothelium. Veno-occlusive disease was induced by azathioprine exposure, leading to impeded perfusion of the vascularized spheroid. The platform holds the potential to replace animals with an in vitro alternative for routine grafting of spheroids, organoids, or (patient-derived) explants.

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