Scientists have for the first time created a functional human liver
from stem cells derived from skin and blood and say their success points
to a future where much-needed livers and other transplant organs could
be made in a laboratory.
While it may take another 10 years before lab-grown livers could be
used to treat patients, the Japanese scientists say they now have
important proof of concept that paves the way for more ambitious
organ-growing experiments.
"The promise of an off-the-shelf liver seems much closer than one
could hope even a year ago," said Dusko Illic, a stem cell expert at
King's College London who was not directly involved in the research but
praised its success.
He said however that while the technique looks "very promising" and
represents a huge step forward, "there is much unknown and it will take
years before it could be applied in regenerative medicine."
Researchers around the world have been studying stem cells from
various sources for more than a decade, hoping to capitalize on their
ability to transform into a wide variety of other kinds of cell to treat
a range of health conditions.
There are two main forms of stem cells - embryonic stem cells, which
are harvested from embryos, and reprogrammed "induced pluripotent stem
cells" (iPS cells), often taken from skin or blood.
Countries across the world have a critical shortage of donor organs
for treating patients with liver, kidney, heart and other organ failure.
Scientists are keenly aware of the need to find other ways of obtaining
organs for transplant.
The Japanese team, based at the Yokohama City University Graduate
School of Medicine in Japan, used iPS cells to make three different cell
types that would normally combine in the natural formation of a human
liver in a developing embryo - hepatic endoderm cells, mesenchymal stem
cells and endothelial cells - and mixed them together to see if they
would grow.
They found the cells did grow and began to form three-dimensional
structures called "liver buds" - a collection of liver cells with the
potential to develop into a full organ.
When they transplanted them into mice, the researchers found the
human liver buds matured, the human blood vessels connected to the mouse
host's blood vessels and they began to perform many of the functions of
mature human liver cells.
"To our knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating the
generation of a functional human organ from pluripotent stem cells," the
researchers wrote in the journal Nature.
Malcolm Allison, a stem cell expert at Queen Mary University of
London, who was not involved in the research, said the study's results
offered "the distinct possibility of being able to create mini livers
from the skin cells of a patient dying of liver failure" and transplant
them to boost the failing organ.
Takanori Takebe, who led the study, told a teleconference he was so
encouraged by the success of this work that he plans similar research on
other organs such as the pancreas and lungs.
A team of American researchers said in April they had created a rat
kidney in a lab that was able to function like a natural one, but their
method used a "scaffold" structure from a kidney to build a new organ.
And in May last year, British researchers said they had turned skin
cells into beating heart tissue that might one day be able to be used to
treat heart failure.
That livers and other organs may one day be made from iPS cells is
an "exciting" prospect, said Matthew Smalley of Cardiff University's
European Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute.
"(This) study holds out real promise for a viable alternative approach to human organ transplants," he said.
Chris Mason, a regenerative medicine expert at University College
London said the greatest impact of iPS cell-liver buds might be in their
use in improving drug development.
"Presently to study the metabolism and toxicology of potential new
drugs, human cadaveric liver cells are used, " he said. "Unfortunately
these are only available in very limited quantities".
The suggestion from this new study is that mice transplanted with
human iPS cell-liver buds might be used to test new drugs to see how the
human liver would cope with them and whether they might have
side-effects such as liver toxicity.
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