期刊论文详细信息
Modelling human development and disease in pluripotent stem-cell-derived gastric organoids
Article
关键词: HELICOBACTER-PYLORI INFECTION;    EPIDERMAL GROWTH-FACTOR;    IN-VITRO;    DEFINITIVE ENDODERM;    DUODENAL-ULCER;    SPECIFICATION;    MORPHOGENESIS;    INTEGRATION;    EPITHELIUM;    MESODERM;   
DOI  :  10.1038/nature13863
来源: SCIE
【 摘 要 】

Gastric diseases, including peptic ulcer disease and gastric cancer, affect 10% of the world's population and are largely due to chronic Helicobacter pylori infection(1-3). Species differences in embryonic development and architecture of the adult stomach make animal models suboptimal for studying human stomach organogenesis and pathogenesis(4), and there is no experimental model of normal human gastric mucosa. Here we report the de novo generation of three-dimensional human gastric tissue in vitro through the directed differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells. We show that temporal manipulation of the FGF, WNT, BMP, retinoic acid and EGF signalling pathways and three-dimensional growth are sufficient to generate human gastric organoids (hGOs). Developing hGOs progressed through molecular and morphogenetic stages that were nearly identical to the developing antrum of the mouse stomach. Organoids formed primitive gastric gland-and pit-like domains, proliferative zones containing LGR5-expressing cells, surface and antral mucous cells, and a diversity of gastric endocrine cells. We used hGO cultures to identify novel signalling mechanisms that regulate early endoderm patterning and gastric endocrine cell differentiation upstream of the transcription factor NEUROG3. UsinghGOs to model pathogenesis of human disease, we found that H. pylori infection resulted in rapid association of the virulence factor CagA with the c-Met receptor, activation of signalling and induction of epithelial proliferation. Together, these studies describe a new and robust in vitro system for elucidating the mechanisms underlying human stomach development and disease.

【 授权许可】

Free   

  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:0次 浏览次数:1次