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1.
ANZ J Surg ; 94(4): 697-701, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38041237

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Prolonged postoperative ileus (PPOI) is associated with higher morbidity and extended inpatient stay. Although evidence suggests that PPOI is more common following right-sided resections, it is uncertain if return to bowel function is similar following extended right (ERH) versus right hemicolectomy (RH). METHODS: The recovery of patients undergoing ERH and RH in a regional hospital in New Zealand was retrospectively compared, from 2012 to 2021. Rates of PPOI, return of bowel function and postoperative complications were compared. Other factors potentially relating to PPOI were analysed. RESULTS: 293 patients were included (42 who underwent ERH, and 251 RH). PPOI was more common following ERH than RH (43% vs. 25%, P = 0.02). When accounting for the operative approach, rate of PPOI was not significantly different (42% open ERH vs. 36% open RH; P = 0.56). Excluding PPOI, return of bowel function did not differ between groups. Patient undergoing ERH versus RH had significantly higher length of stay (1 day) and Hb drop (2.5 g/L) postoperatively. CONCLUSION: Higher rates of PPOI have been demonstrated in ERH versus RH however when controlling for approach, there was not a significant difference. Further interrogation into rates of PPOI (particularly after laparoscopic surgery) are warranted to tailor locoregional ERAS protocols.


Subject(s)
Ileus , Laparoscopy , Humans , Retrospective Studies , Defecation , Colectomy/adverse effects , Colectomy/methods , Laparoscopy/adverse effects , Postoperative Complications/epidemiology , Ileus/epidemiology , Ileus/etiology
3.
J Vis Exp ; (170)2021 04 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33938892

ABSTRACT

Kidney organoids generated from hPSCs have provided an unlimited source of renal tissue. Human kidney organoids are an invaluable tool for studying kidney disease and injury, developing cell-based therapies, and testing new therapeutics. For such applications, large numbers of uniform organoids and highly reproducible assays are needed. We have built upon our previously published kidney organoid protocol to improve the overall health of the organoids. This simple, robust 3D protocol involves the formation of uniform embryoid bodies in minimum component medium containing lipids, insulin-transferrin-selenium-ethanolamine supplement and polyvinyl alcohol with GSK3 inhibitor (CHIR99021) for 3 days, followed by culture in knock-out serum replacement (KOSR)-containing medium. In addition, agitating assays allows for reduction in clumping of the embryoid bodies and maintaining a uniform size, which is important for reducing variability between organoids. Overall, the protocol provides a fast, efficient, and cost-effective method for generating large quantities of kidney organoids.


Subject(s)
Cell Culture Techniques/methods , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/metabolism , Kidney/physiopathology , Organoids/metabolism , Cell Differentiation , Humans
4.
STAR Protoc ; 1(3): 100150, 2020 12 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33377044

ABSTRACT

Kidney organoids represent a physiologically advanced model for studying the mechanisms of kidney development and disease. Here, we describe a simple two-step protocol for the differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells into kidney organoids. Our approach involves suspension culture that allows for rapid and cost-effective bulk production of organoids, which is well suited for large-scale assays such as drug screening. The organoids correspond to fetal human kidney tissue and may be of limited use for modeling adult kidney function. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Przepiorski et al. (2018).


Subject(s)
Cell Culture Techniques/methods , Kidney/cytology , Organoids/cytology , Pluripotent Stem Cells/cytology , Cells, Cultured , Embryoid Bodies/cytology , Humans , Paraffin Embedding
5.
J Am Soc Nephrol ; 31(5): 962-982, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32198276

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Mutations in CTNS-a gene encoding the cystine transporter cystinosin-cause the rare, autosomal, recessive, lysosomal-storage disease cystinosis. Research has also implicated cystinosin in modulating the mTORC1 pathway, which serves as a core regulator of cellular metabolism, proliferation, survival, and autophagy. In its severest form, cystinosis is characterized by cystine accumulation, renal proximal tubule dysfunction, and kidney failure. Because treatment with the cystine-depleting drug cysteamine only slows disease progression, there is an urgent need for better treatments. METHODS: To address a lack of good human-based cell culture models for studying cystinosis, we generated the first human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) and kidney organoid models of the disorder. We used a variety of techniques to examine hallmarks of cystinosis-including cystine accumulation, lysosome size, the autophagy pathway, and apoptosis-and performed RNA sequencing on isogenic lines to identify differentially expressed genes in the cystinosis models compared with controls. RESULTS: Compared with controls, these cystinosis models exhibit elevated cystine levels, increased apoptosis, and defective basal autophagy. Cysteamine treatment ameliorates this phenotype, except for abnormalities in apoptosis and basal autophagy. We found that treatment with everolimus, an inhibitor of the mTOR pathway, reduces the number of large lysosomes, decreases apoptosis, and activates autophagy, but it does not rescue the defect in cystine loading. However, dual treatment of cystinotic iPSCs or kidney organoids with cysteamine and everolimus corrects all of the observed phenotypic abnormalities. CONCLUSIONS: These observations suggest that combination therapy with a cystine-depleting drug such as cysteamine and an mTOR pathway inhibitor such as everolimus has potential to improve treatment of cystinosis.


Subject(s)
Cysteamine/therapeutic use , Cystinosis/drug therapy , Disease Models, Animal , Everolimus/therapeutic use , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/transplantation , Organoids/transplantation , TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors , Amino Acid Transport Systems, Neutral/deficiency , Amino Acid Transport Systems, Neutral/genetics , Animals , Autophagy/drug effects , CRISPR-Cas Systems , Cell Line , Cysteamine/pharmacology , Cystine/blood , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Drug Therapy, Combination , Everolimus/pharmacology , Gene Editing , Heterografts , Humans , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/metabolism , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/ultrastructure , Lysosomes/drug effects , Lysosomes/ultrastructure , Mice , Mice, SCID , Organoids/metabolism , Phenotype
6.
Stem Cell Reports ; 11(2): 470-484, 2018 08 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30033089

ABSTRACT

Kidney organoids made from pluripotent stem cells have the potential to revolutionize how kidney development, disease, and injury are studied. Current protocols are technically complex, suffer from poor reproducibility, and have high reagent costs that restrict scalability. To overcome some of these issues, we have established a simple, inexpensive, and robust method to grow kidney organoids in bulk from human induced pluripotent stem cells. Our organoids develop tubular structures by day 8 and show optimal tissue morphology at day 14. A comparison with fetal human kidneys suggests that day-14 organoid tissue most closely resembles late capillary loop stage nephrons. We show that deletion of HNF1B, a transcription factor linked to congenital kidney defects, interferes with tubulogenesis, validating our experimental system for studying renal developmental biology. Taken together, our protocol provides a fast, efficient, and cost-effective method for generating large quantities of human fetal kidney tissue, enabling the study of normal and aberrant kidney development.


Subject(s)
Bioreactors , Cell Culture Techniques , Kidney/cytology , Organoids/cytology , Pluripotent Stem Cells/cytology , Biomarkers , Cell Differentiation , Fibrosis , Gene Knockout Techniques , Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 1-beta/genetics , Humans , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/cytology , Kidney/embryology , Nephrons/cytology
7.
PLoS One ; 11(10): e0165464, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27792791

ABSTRACT

Corneal diseases such as keratoconus represent a relatively common disorder in the human population. However, treatment is restricted to corneal transplantation, which only occurs in the most advanced cases. Cell based therapies may offer an alternative approach given that the eye is amenable to such treatments and corneal diseases like keratoconus have been associated specifically with the death of corneal keratocytes. The ability to generate corneal keratocytes in vitro may enable a cell-based therapy to treat patients with keratoconus. Human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) offer an abundant supply of cells from which any cell in the body can be derived. In the present study, hiPSCs were successfully differentiated into neural crest cells (NCCs), the embryonic precursor to keratocytes, and then cultured on cadaveric corneal tissue to promote keratocyte differentiation. The hiPSC-derived NCCs were found to migrate into the corneal stroma where they acquired a keratocyte-like morphology and an expression profile similar to corneal keratocytes in vivo. These results indicate that hiPSCs can be used to generate corneal keratocytes in vitro and lay the foundation for using these cells in cornea cell-based therapies.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation , Corneal Keratocytes/cytology , Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells/cytology , Cell Culture Techniques , Cell Line , Collagen/metabolism , Corneal Keratocytes/metabolism , Humans , Iris/cytology , Neural Crest/cytology , Phenotype
8.
Nature ; 470(7332): 95-100, 2011 Feb 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21270795

ABSTRACT

Loss of kidney function underlies many renal diseases. Mammals can partly repair their nephrons (the functional units of the kidney), but cannot form new ones. By contrast, fish add nephrons throughout their lifespan and regenerate nephrons de novo after injury, providing a model for understanding how mammalian renal regeneration may be therapeutically activated. Here we trace the source of new nephrons in the adult zebrafish to small cellular aggregates containing nephron progenitors. Transplantation of single aggregates comprising 10-30 cells is sufficient to engraft adults and generate multiple nephrons. Serial transplantation experiments to test self-renewal revealed that nephron progenitors are long-lived and possess significant replicative potential, consistent with stem-cell activity. Transplantation of mixed nephron progenitors tagged with either green or red fluorescent proteins yielded some mosaic nephrons, indicating that multiple nephron progenitors contribute to a single nephron. Consistent with this, live imaging of nephron formation in transparent larvae showed that nephrogenic aggregates form by the coalescence of multiple cells and then differentiate into nephrons. Taken together, these data demonstrate that the zebrafish kidney probably contains self-renewing nephron stem/progenitor cells. The identification of these cells paves the way to isolating or engineering the equivalent cells in mammals and developing novel renal regenerative therapies.


Subject(s)
Kidney/cytology , Kidney/growth & development , Nephrons/cytology , Regeneration/physiology , Stem Cells/cytology , Zebrafish/growth & development , Aging/physiology , Animals , Animals, Genetically Modified , Cell Proliferation , Kidney/injuries , Kidney/metabolism , Larva , Models, Animal , Nephrons/growth & development , Organogenesis , Stem Cell Transplantation
9.
Cancer Cell ; 8(4): 275-85, 2005 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16226703

ABSTRACT

Loss of imprinting (LOI), commonly observed in human tumors, refers to loss of monoallelic gene regulation normally conferred by parent-of-origin-specific DNA methylation. To test the function of LOI in tumorigenesis, we developed a model by using transient demethylation to generate imprint-free mouse embryonic stem cells (IF-ES cells). Embryonic fibroblasts derived from IF-ES cells (IF-MEFs) display TGFbeta resistance and reduced p19 and p53 expression and form tumors in SCID mice. IF-MEFs exhibit spontaneous immortalization and cooperate with H-Ras in cellular transformation. Chimeric animals derived from IF-ES cells develop multiple tumors arising from the injected IF-ES cells within 12 months. These data demonstrate that LOI alone can predispose cells to tumorigenesis and identify a pathway through which immortality conferred by LOI lowers the threshold for transformation.


Subject(s)
Genomic Imprinting , Neoplasms, Experimental/pathology , Animals , Base Sequence , Cell Line, Transformed , DNA Methylation , DNA Primers , Germ-Line Mutation , Mice , Neoplasms, Experimental/genetics , Polymerase Chain Reaction
10.
Mol Cell Biol ; 24(8): 3286-94, 2004 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15060151

ABSTRACT

Cap'n'collar (CNC) family basic leucine zipper transcription factors play crucial roles in the regulation of mammalian gene expression and development. To determine the in vivo function of the CNC protein Nrf3 (NF-E2-related factor 3), we generated mice deficient in this transcription factor. We performed targeted disruption of two Nrf3 exons coding for CNC homology, basic DNA-binding, and leucine zipper dimerization domains. Nrf3 null mice developed normally and revealed no obvious phenotypic differences compared to wild-type animals. Nrf3(-/-) mice were fertile, and gross anatomy as well as behavior appeared normal. The mice showed normal age progression and did not show any apparent additional phenotype during their life span. We observed no differences in various blood parameters and chemistry values. We infected wild-type and Nrf3(-/-) mice with acute lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus and found no differences in these animals with respect to their number of virus-specific CD8 and CD4 T cells as well as their B-lymphocyte response. To determine whether the mild phenotype of Nrf3 null animals is due to functional redundancy, we generated mice deficient in multiple CNC factors. Contrary to our expectations, an absence of Nrf3 does not seem to cause additional lethality in compound Nrf3(-/-)/Nrf2(-/-) and Nrf3(-/-)/p45(-/-) mice. We hypothesize that the role of Nrf3 in vivo may become apparent only after appropriate challenge to the mice.


Subject(s)
Gene Targeting , Repressor Proteins/metabolism , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Animals , Arenaviridae Infections , Basic-Leucine Zipper Transcription Factors , Chromosomes/metabolism , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Erythroid-Specific DNA-Binding Factors , Exons , Female , Fetal Viability , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Leucine Zippers , Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus , Male , Mice , Mice, Knockout , NF-E2 Transcription Factor , NF-E2 Transcription Factor, p45 Subunit , NF-E2-Related Factor 2 , Phenotype , Repressor Proteins/genetics , Tissue Distribution , Trans-Activators/genetics , Trans-Activators/metabolism , Transcription Factors/genetics
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 100(12): 7283-8, 2003 Jun 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12771386

ABSTRACT

Mice with homozygous null mutations in the high-density lipoprotein receptor SR-BI (scavenger receptor class B, type I) and apolipoprotein E genes fed a low-fat diet exhibit a constellation of pathologies shared with human atherosclerotic coronary heart disease (CHD): hypercholesterolemia, occlusive coronary atherosclerosis, myocardial infarctions, cardiac dysfunction (heart enlargement, reduced systolic function and ejection fraction, and ECG abnormalities), and premature death (mean age 6 weeks). They also exhibit a block in RBC maturation and abnormally high plasma unesterified-to-total cholesterol ratio (0.8) with associated abnormal lipoprotein morphology (lamellar/vesicular and stacked discoidal particles reminiscent of those in lecithin/cholesterol acyltransferase deficiency and cholestasis). Treatment with the lipid-lowering, antiatherosclerosis, and antioxidation drug probucol extended life to as long as 60 weeks (mean 36 weeks), and at 5-6 weeks of age, virtually completely reversed the cardiac and most RBC pathologies and corrected the unesterified to total cholesterol ratio (0.3) and associated distinctive abnormal lipoprotein morphologies. Manipulation of the timing of administration and withdrawal of probucol could control the onset of death and suggested that critical pathological changes usually occurred in untreated double knockout mice between approximately 3 (weaning) and 5 weeks of age and that probucol delayed heart failure even after development of substantial CHD. The ability of probucol treatment to modulate pathophysiology in the double knockout mice enhances the potential of this murine system for analysis of the pathophysiology of CHD and preclinical testing of new approaches for the prevention and treatment of cardiovascular disease.


Subject(s)
Anticholesteremic Agents/pharmacology , Apolipoproteins E/deficiency , CD36 Antigens/metabolism , Coronary Disease/prevention & control , Membrane Proteins , Probucol/pharmacology , Receptors, Immunologic , Receptors, Lipoprotein , Age Factors , Animals , Anticholesteremic Agents/administration & dosage , Apolipoproteins E/genetics , CD36 Antigens/genetics , Cell Differentiation/drug effects , Coronary Disease/drug therapy , Coronary Disease/genetics , Coronary Disease/pathology , Disease Models, Animal , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Erythrocytes/drug effects , Erythrocytes/pathology , Humans , Lipoproteins/blood , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Myocardium/pathology , Probucol/administration & dosage , Receptors, Scavenger , Scavenger Receptors, Class B
12.
Blood ; 99(5): 1817-24, 2002 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11861300

ABSTRACT

Mammalian erythrocytes undergo a unique maturation process in which they discard their nuclei and organelles and assume a flexible biconcave shape. We found that altered plasma lipoprotein metabolism can profoundly influence these events. Abnormal erythrocyte morphology was observed in hypercholesterolemic mice lacking the high-density lipoprotein receptor SR-BI. This was exacerbated by feeding mice a high-cholesterol diet or, more dramatically, by inactivating the apolipoprotein E gene. Erythrocytes from SR-BI(-/-)/apolipoprotein E(-/-) mice and SR-BI(-/-) mice that were fed cholesterol had markedly increased membrane cholesterol. Their morphology appeared immature, with macrocytosis, irregular shape, and large autophagolysosomes. Autophagolysosomes from SR-BI(-/-)/apolipoprotein E(-/-) erythrocytes were expelled when the erythrocytes were transfused into wild-type animals or incubated in vitro with normolipidemic serum or the cholesterol-sequestering agent methyl cyclodextrin. We propose that autophagocytosis and phagolysosome expulsion are essential steps in erythroid maturation and that expulsion is inhibited in the presence of markedly increased cellular cholesterol.


Subject(s)
CD36 Antigens/physiology , Carrier Proteins , Erythrocytes/pathology , Erythropoiesis/drug effects , Lipoproteins, HDL , Membrane Proteins , RNA-Binding Proteins , Receptors, Immunologic , Anemia/blood , Anemia/chemically induced , Anemia/etiology , Animals , Apolipoproteins E/genetics , Apolipoproteins E/physiology , Autophagy/drug effects , Autophagy/genetics , CD36 Antigens/genetics , Cell Differentiation/drug effects , Cholesterol/administration & dosage , Cholesterol/pharmacokinetics , Cholesterol/pharmacology , Erythrocyte Membrane/chemistry , Erythrocyte Membrane/physiology , Erythrocytes/ultrastructure , Erythropoiesis/genetics , Hypercholesterolemia/blood , Lipid Metabolism , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Phagosomes/drug effects , Phagosomes/metabolism , Receptors, Lipoprotein/genetics , Receptors, Lipoprotein/physiology , Receptors, Scavenger , Reticulocytes/pathology , Reticulocytes/ultrastructure , Scavenger Receptors, Class B
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