AI Article Synopsis

  • The gastrointestinal tract's unique environment leads to the rapid renewal of the intestinal epithelium, making it a focus for study using innovative models.
  • Patient-derived intestinal organoids mimic human intestinal conditions and have potential applications across various research areas, including disease modeling, regenerative medicine, and toxicology.
  • Despite their promise, challenges such as ethical issues, tissue collection, and variability in methods may limit their use in broader research and clinical settings.

Article Abstract

The complex and dynamic environment of the gastrointestinal tract shapes one of the fastest renewing tissues in the human body, the intestinal epithelium. Considering the lack of human preclinical studies, reliable models that mimic the intestinal environment are increasingly explored. Patient-derived intestinal organoids are powerful tools that recapitulate in vitro many pathophysiological features of the human intestine. In this review, the possible applications of human intestinal organoids in different research fields are highlighted. From physiologically relevant to intestinal disease modeling, regenerative medicine, and toxicology studies, the potential of intestinal organoids will be here presented and discussed. Despite the remarkable opportunities offered, limitations related to ethical concerns, tissue collection, reproducibility, and methodologies may hinder the full exploitation of this cell-based model into high throughput studies and clinical practice. Currently, distinct approaches can be used to overcome the numerous challenges found along the way and to allow the full implementation of this ground-breaking technology.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lfs.2024.122875DOI Listing

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