4.8 Review

Listen to Your Gut: Key Concepts for Bioengineering Advanced Models of the Intestine

Journal

ADVANCED SCIENCE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/advs.202302165

Keywords

biomaterials; disease modelling; intestine; organoids; organ-on-chip

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This review discusses the cellular and matrix components of the intestine and strategies to replicate them in vitro. By combining principles of bottom-up self-organization and top-down bioengineering, researchers can mimic the chemical and structural features of the intestine. Additionally, the review explores accessible chemistries that mimic the native extracellular matrix and evaluates bioengineering approaches in modeling the intestine.
The intestine performs functions central to human health by breaking down food and absorbing nutrients while maintaining a selective barrier against the intestinal microbiome. Key to this barrier function are the combined efforts of lumen-lining specialized intestinal epithelial cells, and the supportive underlying immune cell-rich stromal tissue. The discovery that the intestinal epithelium can be reproduced in vitro as intestinal organoids introduced a new way to understand intestinal development, homeostasis, and disease. However, organoids reflect the intestinal epithelium in isolation whereas the underlying tissue also contains myriad cell types and impressive chemical and structural complexity. This review dissects the cellular and matrix components of the intestine and discusses strategies to replicate them in vitro using principles drawing from bottom-up biological self-organization and top-down bioengineering. It also covers the cellular, biochemical and biophysical features of the intestinal microenvironment and how these can be replicated in vitro by combining strategies from organoid biology with materials science. Particularly accessible chemistries that mimic the native extracellular matrix are discussed, and bioengineering approaches that aim to overcome limitations in modelling the intestine are critically evaluated. Finally, the review considers how further advances may extend the applications of intestinal models and their suitability for clinical therapies. The intestinal epithelium can be reproduced in vitro as intestinal organoids; however, the native intestine also contains myriad stromal cell types and impressive biochemical and structural complexity. This review dissects the cellular and physical components of the intestine and discusses bioengineering approaches for replicating them in vitro to create advanced models of the intestine for disease modelling and regenerative therapies.image

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