Human iPSC–liver organoid transplantation reduces fibrosis through immunomodulation

Author:

Tadokoro Tomomi12ORCID,Murata Soichiro12ORCID,Kato Mimoko1ORCID,Ueno Yasuharu12,Tsuchida Tomonori2ORCID,Okumura Ayumu2ORCID,Kuse Yoshiki12ORCID,Konno Takahiro1,Uchida Yutaro1,Yamakawa Yuriko12,Zushi Marina2,Yajima Megumi2,Kobayashi Tatsuya12ORCID,Hasegawa Shunsuke1,Kawakatsu-Hatada Yumi1,Hayashi Yoshihito2,Osakabe Shun1ORCID,Maeda Takuji1,Kimura Kodai1,Mori Akihiro1ORCID,Tanaka Maiko1,Kamishibahara Yu12,Matsuo Megumi12,Nie Yun-Zhong12ORCID,Okamoto Satoshi12ORCID,Oba Takayoshi12ORCID,Tanimizu Naoki2,Taniguchi Hideki12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Regenerative Medicine, Yokohama City University School of Medicine, Yokohama, Kanagawa 236-0004, Japan.

2. Division of Regenerative Medicine, Center for Stem Cell Biology and Regeneration Medicine, Institute of Medical Science, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 108-8639, Japan.

Abstract

Donor organ shortages for transplantation remain a serious global concern, and alternative treatment is in high demand. Fetal cells and tissues have considerable therapeutic potential as, for example, organoid technology that uses human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) to generate unlimited human fetal-like cells and tissues. We previously reported the in vivo vascularization of early fetal liver–like hiPSC-derived liver buds (LBs) and subsquent improved survival of recipient mice with subacute liver failure. Here, we show hiPSC–liver organoids (LOs) that recapitulate midgestational fetal liver promote de novo liver generation when grafted onto the surface of host livers in chemical fibrosis models, thereby recovering liver function. We found that fetal liver, a hematopoietic tissue, highly expressed macrophage-recruiting factors and antifibrotic M2 macrophage polarization factors compared with the adult liver, resulting in fibrosis reduction because of CD163 + M2-macrophage polarization. Next, we created midgestational fetal liver–like hiPSC-LOs by fusion of hiPSC-LBs to induce static cell-cell interactions and found that these contained complex structures such as hepatocytes, vasculature, and bile ducts after transplantation. This fusion allowed the generation of a large human tissue suitable for transplantation into immunodeficient rodent models of liver fibrosis. hiPSC-LOs showed superior liver function compared with hiPSC-LBs and improved survival and liver function upon transplantation. In addition, hiPSC-LO transplantation ameliorated chemically induced liver fibrosis, a symptom of liver cirrhosis that leads to organ dysfunction, through immunomodulatory effects, particularly on CD163 + phagocytic M2-macrophage polarization. Together, our results suggest hiPSC-LO transplantation as a promising therapeutic option for liver fibrosis.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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