AI Article Synopsis

  • - Researchers have made significant advancements in creating 3D organoid cultures, which mimic real human organs, to better study human growth and diseases.
  • - They successfully differentiated human pluripotent stem cells into lung organoids (HLOs) by tweaking developmental signaling pathways, producing structures similar to actual lung tissue.
  • - RNA-sequencing reveals that these lung organoids closely resemble human fetal lungs, indicating their potential as reliable models for examining lung development, maturation, and related diseases.

Article Abstract

Recent breakthroughs in 3-dimensional (3D) organoid cultures for many organ systems have led to new physiologically complex in vitro models to study human development and disease. Here, we report the step-wise differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) (embryonic and induced) into lung organoids. By manipulating developmental signaling pathways hPSCs generate ventral-anterior foregut spheroids, which are then expanded into human lung organoids (HLOs). HLOs consist of epithelial and mesenchymal compartments of the lung, organized with structural features similar to the native lung. HLOs possess upper airway-like epithelium with basal cells and immature ciliated cells surrounded by smooth muscle and myofibroblasts as well as an alveolar-like domain with appropriate cell types. Using RNA-sequencing, we show that HLOs are remarkably similar to human fetal lung based on global transcriptional profiles, suggesting that HLOs are an excellent model to study human lung development, maturation and disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4370217PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.05098DOI Listing

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