Deterministically patterned biomimetic human iPSC-derived hepatic model via rapid 3D bioprinting

Xuanyi Ma(University of California San Diego), Xin Qu(University of California San Diego), Wei Zhu(University of California San Diego), Yi‐Shuan Li(University of California San Diego), Suli Yuan(University of California San Diego), Hong Zhang(University of California San Diego), Justin Liu(University of California San Diego), Pengrui Wang(University of California San Diego), Cheuk Sun Edwin Lai(University of California San Diego), Fabian Zanella(University of California San Diego), Gen‐Sheng Feng(University of California San Diego), Farah Sheikh(University of California San Diego), Shu Chien(University of California San Diego), Shaochen Chen(University of California San Diego)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
February 8, 2016
Cited by 863Open Access
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Abstract

The functional maturation and preservation of hepatic cells derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) are essential to personalized in vitro drug screening and disease study. Major liver functions are tightly linked to the 3D assembly of hepatocytes, with the supporting cell types from both endodermal and mesodermal origins in a hexagonal lobule unit. Although there are many reports on functional 2D cell differentiation, few studies have demonstrated the in vitro maturation of hiPSC-derived hepatic progenitor cells (hiPSC-HPCs) in a 3D environment that depicts the physiologically relevant cell combination and microarchitecture. The application of rapid, digital 3D bioprinting to tissue engineering has allowed 3D patterning of multiple cell types in a predefined biomimetic manner. Here we present a 3D hydrogel-based triculture model that embeds hiPSC-HPCs with human umbilical vein endothelial cells and adipose-derived stem cells in a microscale hexagonal architecture. In comparison with 2D monolayer culture and a 3D HPC-only model, our 3D triculture model shows both phenotypic and functional enhancements in the hiPSC-HPCs over weeks of in vitro culture. Specifically, we find improved morphological organization, higher liver-specific gene expression levels, increased metabolic product secretion, and enhanced cytochrome P450 induction. The application of bioprinting technology in tissue engineering enables the development of a 3D biomimetic liver model that recapitulates the native liver module architecture and could be used for various applications such as early drug screening and disease modeling.


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