类有机物
基底膜
诱导多能干细胞
干细胞
血管
内皮
糖尿病
病理
内科学
医学
生物
细胞生物学
内分泌学
生物化学
基因
胚胎干细胞
作者
Reiner Wimmer,Alexandra Leopoldi,Martin Aichinger,Nikolaus Wick,Brigitte Hantusch,Maria Novatchkova,Jasmin Taubenschmid,Monika Hämmerle,Christopher Esk,Joshua A. Bagley,Dominik Lindenhofer,Guibin Chen,Manfred Boehm,Chukwuma A. Agu,Fengtang Yang,Beiyuan Fu,Johannes Zuber,Juergen A. Knoblich,Dontscho Kerjaschki,Josef Penninger
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2019-01-01
卷期号:565 (7740): 505-510
被引量:557
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-018-0858-8
摘要
The increasing prevalence of diabetes has resulted in a global epidemic1. Diabetes is a major cause of blindness, kidney failure, heart attacks, stroke and amputation of lower limbs. These are often caused by changes in blood vessels, such as the expansion of the basement membrane and a loss of vascular cells2–4. Diabetes also impairs the functions of endothelial cells5 and disturbs the communication between endothelial cells and pericytes6. How dysfunction of endothelial cells and/or pericytes leads to diabetic vasculopathy remains largely unknown. Here we report the development of self-organizing three-dimensional human blood vessel organoids from pluripotent stem cells. These human blood vessel organoids contain endothelial cells and pericytes that self-assemble into capillary networks that are enveloped by a basement membrane. Human blood vessel organoids transplanted into mice form a stable, perfused vascular tree, including arteries, arterioles and venules. Exposure of blood vessel organoids to hyperglycaemia and inflammatory cytokines in vitro induces thickening of the vascular basement membrane. Human blood vessels, exposed in vivo to a diabetic milieu in mice, also mimic the microvascular changes found in patients with diabetes. DLL4 and NOTCH3 were identified as key drivers of diabetic vasculopathy in human blood vessels. Therefore, organoids derived from human stem cells faithfully recapitulate the structure and function of human blood vessels and are amenable systems for modelling and identifying the regulators of diabetic vasculopathy, a disease that affects hundreds of millions of patients worldwide. Organoids derived from human stem cells recapitulate the structure and functions of human blood vessels, and can be used to model and identify regulators of diabetic vasculopathy.
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