Human pluripotent stem cells for modelling human liver diseases and cell therapy.
2013
The liver is affected by many types of diseases, including metabolic disorders and acute liver failure. Orthotopic
liver transplantation (OLT) is currently the only effective treatment for life-threatening liver diseases but transplantation
of allogeneic hepatocytes has now become an alternative as it is less invasive than OLT and can be performed repeatedly.
However, this approach is hampered by the shortage of organ donors, and the problems related to the isolation of
high quality adult hepatocytes, their cryopreservation and their absence of proliferation in culture. Liver is also a key organ
to assess the pharmacokinetics and toxicology of xenobiotics and for drug discovery, but appropriate cell culture systems
are lacking. All these problems have highlighted the need to explore other sources of cells such as stem cells that
could be isolated, expanded to yield sufficiently large populations and then induced to differentiate into functional hepatocytes.
The presence of a niche of “facultative” progenitor and stem cells in the normal liver has recently been confirmed
but they display no telomerase activity. The recent discovery that human induced pluripotent stem cells can be generated
from somatic cells has renewed hopes for regenerative medicine and in vitro disease modelling, as these cells are easily
accessible. We review here the present progresses, limits and challenges for the generation of functional hepatocytes from
human pluripotent stem cells in view of their potential use in regenerative medicine and drug discovery.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
130
References
49
Citations
NaN
KQI