skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Engineered Matrices Enable the Culture of Human Patient‐Derived Intestinal Organoids
Abstract Human intestinal organoids from primary human tissues have the potential to revolutionize personalized medicine and preclinical gastrointestinal disease models. A tunable, fully defined, designer matrix, termed hyaluronan elastin‐like protein (HELP) is reported, which enables the formation, differentiation, and passaging of adult primary tissue‐derived, epithelial‐only intestinal organoids. HELP enables the encapsulation of dissociated patient‐derived cells, which then undergo proliferation and formation of enteroids, spherical structures with polarized internal lumens. After 12 rounds of passaging, enteroid growth in HELP materials is found to be statistically similar to that in animal‐derived matrices. HELP materials also support the differentiation of human enteroids into mature intestinal cell subtypes. HELP matrices allow stiffness, stress relaxation rate, and integrin‐ligand concentration to be independently and quantitatively specified, enabling fundamental studies of organoid–matrix interactions and potential patient‐specific optimization. Organoid formation in HELP materials is most robust in gels with stiffer moduli (G’≈ 1 kPa), slower stress relaxation rate (t1/2≈ 18 h), and higher integrin ligand concentration (0.5 × 10−3–1 × 10−3mRGD peptide). This material provides a promising in vitro model for further understanding intestinal development and disease in humans and a reproducible, biodegradable, minimal matrix with no animal‐derived products or synthetic polyethylene glycol for potential clinical translation.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1808415
PAR ID:
10376014
Author(s) / Creator(s):
 ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  
Publisher / Repository:
Wiley Blackwell (John Wiley & Sons)
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Advanced Science
Volume:
8
Issue:
10
ISSN:
2198-3844
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract Organoids are lumen‐containing multicellular structures that recapitulate key features of the organs, and are increasingly used in models of disease, drug testing, and regenerative medicine. Recent work has used 3D culture models to form organoids from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) in reconstituted basement membrane (rBM) matrices. However, rBM matrices offer little control over the microenvironment. More generally, the role of matrix viscoelasticity in directing lumen formation remains unknown. Here, viscoelastic alginate hydrogels with independently tunable stress relaxation (viscoelasticity), stiffness, and arginine–glycine–aspartate (RGD) ligand density are used to study hiPSC morphogenesis in 3D culture. A phase diagram that shows how these properties control hiPSC morphogenesis is reported. Higher RGD density and fast stress relaxation promote hiPSC viability, proliferation, apicobasal polarization, and lumen formation, while slow stress relaxation at low RGD densities triggers hiPSC apoptosis. Notably, hiPSCs maintain pluripotency in alginate hydrogels for much longer times than is reported in rBM matrices. Lumen formation is regulated by actomyosin contractility and is accompanied by translocation of Yes‐associated protein (YAP) from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. The results reveal matrix viscoelasticity as a potent factor regulating stem cell morphogenesis and provide new insights into how engineered biomaterials may be leveraged to build organoids. 
    more » « less
  2. Human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived brain organoids can recapitulate the complex cytoarchitecture of the brain as well as the genetic and epigenetic footprint of human brain development. Although the brain organoids are able to mimic the structures and functions of brain in vitro, the 3D models have difficulty in integrating a complex vascular network that can provide the interaction with organoids. Here we report on a microfluidicbased three-dimensional, vascularized cortical organoid tissue construct consisting of 1) a perfused micro-vessel against an extracellular matrix (ECM), dynamic flow and membrane-free culture of the endothelial layer, 2) a sprouted vascular network using a combination of angiogenic factors, and 3) a vascularized hiPSCderived cortical organoid. We report on an optimization of density/stiffness of ECM to induce angiogenic sprouting and effect of angiogenic factors to trigger robust, rapid, and directional angiogenesis for concentration-driven and repetitive sprout formation. Vascularized network in the microfluidic device was further characterized in terms of morphology, directional alignment under perfusion, lumen formation, and permeability. HiPSCderived cortical organoid was generated, placed, and integrated into a vascularized network in the vascularized microfluidic device. We investigate how vascularized micro-vessels interact with cortical organoid. This paper further demonstrates the potential utility of a membrane-free vascularized cortical organoid in perfusion used to model Alzheimer’s disease and for toxicity screening of nerve agents. 
    more » « less
  3. Human neural organoid models have become an important tool for studying neurobiology. However, improving the representativeness of neural cell populations in such organoids remains a major effort. In this work, we compared Matrigel, a commercially available matrix, to a neural cadherin (N-cadherin) peptide-functionalized gelatin methacryloyl hydrogel (termed GelMA-Cad) for culturing cortical neural organoids. We determined that peptide presentation can tune cell fate and diversity in gelatin-based matrices during differentiation. Of particular note, cortical organoids cultured in GelMA-Cad hydrogels mapped more closely to human fetal populations and produced neurons with more spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents relative to Matrigel. These results provide compelling evidence that matrix-tethered signaling peptides can influence neural organoid differentiation, opening an avenue to control stem cell fate. Moreover, outcomes from this work showcase the technical utility of GelMA-Cad as a simple and defined hydrogel alternative to Matrigel for neural organoid culture. 
    more » « less
  4. Abstract Structural and mechanical cues from the extracellular matrix (ECM) regulate tissue morphogenesis. Tissue development has conventionally been studied withex vivosystems where mechanical properties of the extracellular environment are either poorly controlled in space and time, lack tunability, or do not mimic ECM mechanics. For these reasons, it remains unknown how matrix stress relaxation rate, a time-dependent mechanical property that influences several cellular processes, regulates mammary branching morphogenesis. Here, we systematically investigated the influence of matrix stress relaxation on mammary branching morphogenesis using 3D alginate-collagen matrices and spheroids of human mammary epithelial cells. Slow stress relaxing matrices promoted significantly greater branch formation compared to fast stress relaxing matrices. Branching in slow stress relaxing matrices was accompanied by local collagen fiber alignment, while collagen fibers remained randomly oriented in fast stress relaxing matrices. In slow stress relaxing matrices, branch formation was driven by intermittent pulling contractions applied to the local ECM at the tips of elongating branches, which was accompanied by an abundance of phosphorylated focal adhesion kinase (phospho-FAK) and β1 integrin at the tips of branches. On the contrary, we observed that growing spheroids in fast stress relaxing matrices applied isotropic pushing forces to the ECM. Pharmacological inhibition of both Rac1 and non-muscle myosin II prevented epithelial branch formation, regardless of matrix stress relaxation rate. Interestingly, restricting cellular expansion via increased osmotic pressure was sufficient to impede epithelial branching in slow stress relaxing matrices. This work highlights the importance of stress relaxation in regulating and directing mammary branch elongation. 
    more » « less
  5. Immunosurveillance of the gastrointestinal epithelium by mononuclear phagocytes (MNPs) is essential for maintaining gut health. However, studying the complex interplay between the human gastrointestinal epithelium and MNPs such as dendritic cells (DCs) is difficult, since traditional cell culture systems lack complexity, and animal models may not adequately represent human tissues. Microphysiological systems, or tissue chips, are an attractive alternative for these investigations, because they model functional features of specific tissues or organs using microscale culture platforms that recreate physiological tissue microenvironments. However, successful integration of multiple of tissue types on a tissue chip platform to reproduce physiological cell-cell interactions remains a challenge. We previously developed a tissue chip system, the gut organoid flow chip (GOFlowChip), for long term culture of 3-D pluripotent stem cell-derived human intestinal organoids. Here, we optimized the GOFlowChip platform to build a complex microphysiological immune-cell-epithelial cell co-culture model in order to study DC-epithelial interactions in human stomach. We first tested different tubing materials and chip configurations to optimize DC loading onto the GOFlowChip and demonstrated that DC culture on the GOFlowChip for up to 20 h did not impact DC activation status or viability. However, Transwell chemotaxis assays and live confocal imaging revealed that Matrigel, the extracellular matrix (ECM) material commonly used for organoid culture, prevented DC migration towards the organoids and the establishment of direct MNP-epithelial contacts. Therefore, we next evaluated DC chemotaxis through alternative ECM materials including Matrigel-collagen mixtures and synthetic hydrogels. A polysaccharide-based synthetic hydrogel, VitroGel®-ORGANOID-3 (V-ORG-3), enabled significantly increased DC chemotaxis through the matrix, supported organoid survival and growth, and did not significantly alter DC activation or viability. On the GOFlowChip, DCs that were flowed into the chip migrated rapidly through the V-ORG matrix and reached organoids embedded deep within the chip, with increased interactions between DCs and gastric organoids. The successful integration of DCs and V-ORG-3 embedded gastric organoids into the GOFlowChip platform now permits real-time imaging of MNP-epithelial interactions and other investigations of the complex interplay between gastrointestinal MNPs and epithelial cells in their response to pathogens, candidate drugs and mucosal vaccines. 
    more » « less