Kidney tubular cells are submitted to two distinct mechanical forces generated by the urine flow: shear stress and hydrostatic pressure. In addition, the mechanical properties of the surrounding extracellular matrix modulate tubule deformation under constraints. These mechanical factors likely play a role in the pathophysiology of kidney diseases as exemplified by autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, in which pressure, flow and matrix stiffness have been proposed to modulate the cystic dilation of tubules with mutations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe organ-on-chip model offers versatility and modularity of in vitro models while approaching the biological fidelity of in vivo models. We propose a method to build a perfusable kidney-on-chip aiming at reproducing key features of the densely packed segments of nephrons in vitro; such as their geometry, their extracellular matrix, and their mechanical properties. The core of the chip is made of parallel tubular channels molded into collagen I that are as small as 80 μm in diameter and as close as 100 μm apart.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease (ADPKD) is a major renal pathology provoked by the deletion of or genes leading to local renal tubule dilation followed by the formation of numerous cysts, ending up with renal failure in adulthood. , renal tubules are tightly packed, so that dilating tubules and expanding cysts may have mechanical influence on adjacent tubules. To decipher the role of this coupling between adjacent tubules, we developed a kidney-on-chip reproducing parallel networks of tightly packed tubes.
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