4.6 Article

Development of a Three-Dimensional Bioengineering Technology to Generate Lung Tissue for Personalized Disease Modeling

Journal

STEM CELLS TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages 622-633

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.5966/sctm.2016-0192

Keywords

Lung; Tissue engineering; Disease modeling; Three-dimensional cell culture

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship
  2. University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Eli and Edythe Broad Stem Cell Research Center
  3. UCLA Eli and Edythe Broad Stem Cell Research Center
  4. National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIH/NIGMS) [R01 GM114259-01]
  5. California Institute for Regenerative Medicine [CIRM2-009-04, CIRM 12-02]
  6. Dave Steffy Stem Cell Research Fund for Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis

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Stem cell technologies, especially patient-specific, induced stem cell pluripotency and directed differentiation, hold great promise for changing the landscape of medical therapies. Proper exploitation of these methods may lead to personalized organ transplants, but to regenerate organs, it is necessary to develop methods for assembling differentiated cells into functional, organ-level tissues. The generation of three-dimensional human tissue models also holds potential for medical advances in disease modeling, as full organ functionality may not be necessary to recapitulate disease pathophysiology. This is specifically true of lung diseases where animal models often do not recapitulate human disease. Here, we present a method for the generation of self-assembled human lung tissue and its potential for disease modeling and drug discovery for lung diseases characterized by progressive and irreversible scarring such as idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Tissue formation occurs because of the overlapping processes of cellular adhesion to multiple alveolar sac templates, bioreactor rotation, and cellular contraction. Addition of transforming growth factor-beta 1 to single cell-type mesenchymal organoids resulted in morphologic scarring typical of that seen in IPF but not in two-dimensional IPF fibroblast cultures. Furthermore, this lung organoid may be modified to contain multiple lung cell types assembled into the correct anatomical location, thereby allowing cell-cell contact and recapitulating the lung microenvironment. Our bottom-up approach for synthesizing patient-specific lung tissue in a scalable system allows for the development of relevant human lung disease models with the potential for high throughput drug screening to identify targeted therapies.

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