2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111281
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Organoids capture tissue-specific innate lymphoid cell development in mice and humans

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Cited by 14 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Notably, epithelial intestinal or pulmonary cells were shown to mature co-cultured innate lymphoid cells into tissue-specific phenotypes without requiring subset-specific cytokine supplementation. 66 Complex organoid assembly may be cumbersome because of limitations related to the isolation of sufficient syngeneic cell types from human liver donor tissue or biopsy material. Using HLA-matched peripheral blood mononuclear cells from commercial or academic repositories or allogenic cell types for HLA-independent hypotheses may overcome the limitation.…”
Section: Primary Tissue-derived Organoids For Nafld Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Notably, epithelial intestinal or pulmonary cells were shown to mature co-cultured innate lymphoid cells into tissue-specific phenotypes without requiring subset-specific cytokine supplementation. 66 Complex organoid assembly may be cumbersome because of limitations related to the isolation of sufficient syngeneic cell types from human liver donor tissue or biopsy material. Using HLA-matched peripheral blood mononuclear cells from commercial or academic repositories or allogenic cell types for HLA-independent hypotheses may overcome the limitation.…”
Section: Primary Tissue-derived Organoids For Nafld Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In cocultures, both iPSCderived intestinal and lung organoids can also signal to ILC progenitors to drive tissue-specific maturation of the immune cell populations. [178] DCs are also important players in the intestine, which researchers have attempted to incorporate into tissue models. DCs interact with the IE, presenting antigens transcytosed by the IE to T cells to mount adaptive immune responses.…”
Section: Immune Cell Populationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The long time needed to obtain patient-derived PSCs is also a downside and may prevent the translation of such approaches to the clinic. [129] Primary Immune Cells: Many intestinal in vitro models incorporate primary immune cell subpopulations, including lymphocytes, [130][131][132][133][134] monocytes/macrophages, [135,136] dendritic cells, [137] and neutrophils. [138,139] Tissue-resident immune cells can be harvested from the intestinal lamina propria and show tissue-specific characteristics and functions, being phenotypically different from the ones found in other tissues or in circulation and are thus more physiologically relevant.…”
Section: Primary Cellsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This bidirectional relationship can be studied by coculturing immune cells with the epithelium. In this perspective, and due to performing distinct and specific functions in inflammation, different subsets of immune cells have been used in combination with organoids models: monocytes, [137] macrophages, [136,212] polymorphonuclear leukocytes, [138,139] lymphocytes, [130] and DCs. [141] Another drawback of organoids lies in their heterogeneous structures with a closed sphere-like spatial arrangement that prevents direct access to the apical side of the epithelium.…”
Section: Organoidsmentioning
confidence: 99%