Medical Research Council Centre for Regenerative Medicine, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom; FibromEd Products Ltd., Edinburgh Bio-Quarter, Edinburgh, United Kingdom; Medical Research Council Centre for Inflammation, Edinburgh, United Kingdom; Discovery Toxicology, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Princeton, New Jersey, USA; Department of Oncology, Second Military Medical University, Shanghai Changzheng Hospital, Shanghai, People's Republic of China.
Stem Cells Transl Med. 2014 Feb;3(2):141-8. doi: 10.5966/sctm.2013-0146. Epub 2013 Dec 27.
Despite major progress in the knowledge and management of human liver injury, there are millions of people suffering from chronic liver disease. Currently, the only cure for end-stage liver disease is orthotopic liver transplantation; however, this approach is severely limited by organ donation. Alternative approaches to restoring liver function have therefore been pursued, including the use of somatic and stem cell populations. Although such approaches are essential in developing scalable treatments, there is also an imperative to develop predictive human systems that more effectively study and/or prevent the onset of liver disease and decompensated organ function. We used a renewable human stem cell resource, from defined genetic backgrounds, and drove them through developmental intermediates to yield highly active, drug-inducible, and predictive human hepatocyte populations. Most importantly, stem cell-derived hepatocytes displayed equivalence to primary adult hepatocytes, following incubation with known hepatotoxins. In summary, we have developed a serum-free, scalable, and shippable cell-based model that faithfully predicts the potential for human liver injury. Such a resource has direct application in human modeling and, in the future, could play an important role in developing renewable cell-based therapies.
尽管人类肝损伤的知识和管理取得了重大进展,但仍有数百万患有慢性肝病的人。目前,治疗终末期肝病的唯一方法是原位肝移植;然而,这种方法受到器官捐献的严重限制。因此,人们一直在寻求替代方法来恢复肝功能,包括使用体细胞核移植和干细胞群体。虽然这些方法对于开发可扩展的治疗方法至关重要,但也需要开发更有效地研究和/或预防肝病和代偿性器官功能障碍发生的预测性人类系统。我们使用了可再生的人类干细胞资源,来自明确的遗传背景,并通过发育中间体将其转化为具有高活性、药物诱导和预测性的人类肝细胞群体。最重要的是,干细胞衍生的肝细胞在用已知的肝毒素孵育后,与原代成人肝细胞表现出等效性。总之,我们开发了一种无血清、可扩展和可运输的基于细胞的模型,能够准确预测人类肝损伤的潜力。这种资源可直接用于人类建模,并且在未来可能在开发可再生细胞疗法方面发挥重要作用。