Hydrogels derived from decellularized liver tissue support the growth and differentiation of cholangiocyte organoids
Willemse, Jorke; van Tienderen, Gilles; van Hengel, Eline; Schurink, Ivo; van der Ven, Diana; Kan, Yik; de Ruiter, Petra; Rosmark, Oskar; Westergren-Thorsson G, Gunilla; Schneeberger, Kerstin; van der Eerden, Bram; Roest, Henk; Spee, Bart; van der Laan, Luc; de Jonge, Jeroen; Verstegen, Monique
(2022) Biomaterials, volume 284, pp. 1 - 16
(Article)
Abstract
Human cholangiocyte organoids are promising for regenerative medicine applications, such as repair of damaged bile ducts. However, organoids are typically cultured in mouse tumor-derived basement membrane extracts (BME), which is poorly defined, highly variable and limits the direct clinical applications of organoids in patients. Extracellular matrix (ECM)-derived hydrogels prepared from
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decellularized human or porcine livers are attractive alternative culture substrates. Here, the culture and expansion of human cholangiocyte organoids in liver ECM(LECM)-derived hydrogels is described. These hydrogels support proliferation of cholangiocyte organoids and maintain the cholangiocyte-like phenotype. The use of LECM hydrogels does not significantly alter the expression of selected genes or proteins, such as the cholangiocyte marker cytokeratin-7, and no species-specific effect is found between human or porcine LECM hydrogels. Proliferation rates of organoids cultured in LECM hydrogels are lower, but the differentiation capacity of the cholangiocyte organoids towards hepatocyte-like cells is not altered by the presence of tissue-specific ECM components. Moreover, human LECM extracts support the expansion of ICO in a dynamic culture set up without the need for laborious static culture of organoids in hydrogel domes. Liver ECM hydrogels can successfully replace tumor-derived BME and can potentially unlock the full clinical potential of human cholangiocyte organoids.
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Keywords: Extracellular matrix based hydrogel, Hepatobiliary tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, Human intrahepatic cholangiocyte organoids, Liver extracellular matrix extracts, Whole organ perfusion-based liver decellularization, Biophysics, Bioengineering, Ceramics and Composites, Biomaterials, Mechanics of Materials
ISSN: 0142-9612
Publisher: Elsevier Ltd
Note: Funding Information: We would like to thank Dr. Bram Zoetebier from the University of Twente for assistance on performing shear rheology experiment. This project was funded by a ?Medical Delta Regenerative Medicine 4D: Generating complex tissues with stem cells and printing technology? grant, a TKI-LSH grant (EMC-LSH19002) and a Gastrostart grant from the Dutch Society for GastroEnterology (NVGE). Funding Information: We would like to thank Dr. Bram Zoetebier from the University of Twente for assistance on performing shear rheology experiment. This project was funded by a ‘ Medical Delta Regenerative Medicine 4D: Generating complex tissues with stem cells and printing technology ’ grant, a TKI-LSH grant ( EMC-LSH19002 ) and a Gastrostart grant from the Dutch Society for GastroEnterology (NVGE). Publisher Copyright: © 2022
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