A CYPRIOT doctor has led a team of researchers to a breakthrough in the engineering of new kidney tissue from a patient’s own cells that could revolutionise the field of kidney transplants and save lives.
With a worldwide shortage of kidneys for patients who need transplants, researchers have been working to find ways to engineer new kidney tissue from a patient’s own cells or another source. They’ve come a step closer with a breakthrough described in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN) study. The advance could lead to more options for individuals with kidney failure, as well as better tools for understanding kidney diseases and how to treat them.
Cypriot doctor, Christodoulos Xinaris PhD from the Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research in Milan, and his colleagues have now for the first time constructed “organoids” that can be integrated into a living animal and carry out kidney functions including blood filtering and molecule reabsorption.
According to an announcement from the institute, key to their success was soaking the organoids in a solution containing molecules that promote blood vessel formation, then injecting these molecules into the recipient animals after the organoids were implanted below the kidneys.
The organoids continued to mature and were viable for three to four weeks after implantation, it said.
“The ability to build functional renal tissue starting from suspensions of single cells represents a considerable step toward the practical goal of engineering renal tissues suitable for transplantation and offers the methodological basis for a number of investigative and therapeutic applications,” said Xinaris. For example, he said, disease-related genes could be introduced into an organoid to help researchers study the mechanisms of complex kidney diseases and to perform a preliminary screening of new drugs to treat them.
Investigators can produce tissues similar to immature kidneys from simple suspensions of embryonic kidney cells, but they have been unsuccessful as yet at growing more mature kidney tissues in the lab because the kidneys’ complicated filtering units do not form without the support of blood vessels, the institute said.
The study’s co-authors include Valentina Benedetti, BiolSciD, Paola Rizzo, BiolSciD, Mauro Abbate, MD, Daniela Corna, Nadia Azzolini, Sara Conti, BSc, Mathieu Unbekand, PhD, Jamie A. Davies, PhD, Marina Morigi PhD, Ariela Benigni, PhD, and Giuseppe Remuzzi, MD.
Cyprus Mail