A Perspective on a Urine-Derived Kidney Tubuloid Biobank from Patients with Hereditary Tubulopathies

Publication date

2021-03

Authors

Schutgens, Frans
Rookmaaker, Maarten BISNI 0000000388928841
Verhaar, Marianne C.ORCID 0000-0002-3276-6428ISNI 0000000390259392

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Inherited kidney tubulopathies comprise a group of rare diseases with a significant societal impact, as lifelong treatment is often required and no therapies are available to prevent progression of renal damage. Diagnosis of inherited tubulopathies has improved with the advances of next generation sequencing. However, difficulties remain, such as a lack of genotype-phenotype correlation and unknown pathogenicity of newly identified variants. In addition, treatment remains mainly symptomatic. Both diagnosis and treatment can be improved by addition of in vitro functional studies to clinical care. Urine-derived kidney organoids ("tubuloids") are a promising platform for these studies. International collections of patient-derived tubuloids in a living biobank offer additional advantages for drug development and pathophysiological studies. In this review, we discuss how diagnosis and treatment of tubulopathies can be improved by in vitro studies using a tubuloid biobank. We also address practical challenges in the development of such biobank. Impact statement This review provides readers insight into aspects related to diagnosis and treatment of hereditary kidney tubulopathies that can be improved. In addition, it explains why in vitro functional analyses using a kidney organoid model (tubuloids) may be useful as a method to improve these aspects. Finally, the additional advantages and practical hurdles of collecting tubuloid lines in a biobank are discussed.

Keywords

biobank, disease model, kidney, organoid, stem cell, Taverne, Bioengineering, Medicine (miscellaneous), Biomedical Engineering

Citation

Schutgens, F, Rookmaaker, M & Verhaar, M 2021, 'A Perspective on a Urine-Derived Kidney Tubuloid Biobank from Patients with Hereditary Tubulopathies', Tissue Engineering - Part C: Methods, vol. 27, no. 3, pp. 177-182. https://doi.org/10.1089/ten.tec.2020.0366