Regenerative human liver organoids (HLOs) in a pillar/perfusion plate for hepatotoxicity assays

用于肝毒性检测的柱/灌注板中的再生人类肝类器官 (HLO)

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作者:Sunil Shrestha, Prabha Acharya, Soo-Yeon Kang, Manav Goud Vanga, Vinod Kumar Reddy Lekkala, Jiafeng Liu, Yong Yang, Pranav Joshi, Moo-Yeal Lee

Abstract

Human liver organoids (HLOs) differentiated from embryonic stem cells (ESCs), induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), and adult stem cells (ASCs) can recapitulate the structure and function of human fetal liver tissues, thus being considered as a promising tissue model for liver diseases and predictive compound screening. However, the adoption of HLOs in drug discovery faces several technical challenges, which include the lengthy differentiation process with multiple culture media leading to batch-to-batch variation, short-term maintenance of hepatic functions post-maturation, low assay throughput due to Matrigel dissociation and HLO transfer to a microtiter well plate, and insufficient maturity levels compared to primary hepatocytes. To address these issues, expandable HLOs (Exp-HLOs) derived from human iPSCs were generated by optimizing differentiation protocols, which were rapidly printed on a 144-pillar plate with sidewalls and slits (144PillarPlate) and dynamically cultured for up to 20 days into differentiated HLOs (Diff-HLOs) in a 144-perfusion plate with perfusion wells and reservoirs (144PerfusionPlate) for in situ organoid culture and analysis. The dynamically cultured Diff-HLOs exhibited greater maturity and reproducibility than those cultured statically, especially after a 10-day differentiation period. In addition, Diff-HLOs in the pillar/perfusion plate were tested with acetaminophen and troglitazone for 3 days to assess drug-induced liver injury (DILI) and then incubated in an expansion medium for 10 days to evaluate liver recovery from DILI. The assessment of liver regeneration post-injury is critical to understanding the mechanism of recovery and determining the threshold drug concentration beyond which there will be a sharp decrease in the liver's regenerative capacity. We envision that bioprinted Diff-HLOs in the pillar/perfusion plate could be used for high-throughput screening (HTS) of hepatotoxic compounds due to the short-term differentiation of passage-able Exp-HLOs, stable hepatic function post-maturation, high reproducibility, and high throughput with capability of in situ organoid culture, testing, staining, imaging, and analysis.

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