Co-axial Printing of Convoluted Proximal Tubule for Kidney Disease Modeling

Publication date

2022-10

Authors

van Genderen, Anne MetjeISNI 0000000492860867
Valverde, Marta G.ISNI 0000000506581923
Capendale, Pamela E
Kersten, ValerieISNI 0000000512542197
Sendino Garvi, ElenaISNI 0000000507425359
Schuurmans, C C LISNI 0000000493311341
Ruelas, Marina
Soeiro, Joana T
Tang, Guosheng
Janssen, Manoe JISNI 0000000419454571

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

Despite the increasing incidence of kidney-related diseases, we are still far from understanding the underlying mechanisms of these diseases and their progression. This lack of understanding is partly because of a poor replication of the diseasesin vitro,limited to planar culture. Advancing towards three-dimensional models, hereby we propose coaxial printing to obtain microfibers containing a helical hollow microchannel. These recapitulate the architecture of the proximal tubule (PT), an important nephron segment often affected in kidney disorders. A stable gelatin/alginate-based ink was formulated to allow printability while maintaining structural properties. Fine-tuning of the composition, printing temperature and extrusion rate allowed for optimal ink viscosity that led to coiling of the microfiber's inner channel. The printed microfibers exhibited prolonged structural stability (42 days) and cytocompatibility in culture. Healthy conditionally immortalized PT epithelial cells and a knockout cell model for cystinosis (CTNS-/-) were seeded to mimic two genotypes of PT. Upon culturing for 14 days, engineered PT showed homogenous cytoskeleton organization as indicated by staining for filamentous actin, barrier-formation and polarization with apical markerα-tubulin and basolateral marker Na+/K+-ATPase. Cell viability was slightly decreased upon prolonged culturing for 14 days, which was more pronounced inCTNS-/-microfibers. Finally,CTNS-/-cells showed reduced apical transport activity in the microfibers compared to healthy PT epithelial cells when looking at breast cancer resistance protein and multidrug resistance-associated protein 4. Engineered PT incorporated in a custom-designed microfluidic chip allowed to assess leak-tightness of the epithelium, which appeared less tight inCTNS-/-PT compared to healthy PT, in agreement with itsin vivophenotype. While we are still on the verge of patient-oriented medicine, this system holds great promise for further research in establishing advancedin vitrodisease models.

Keywords

coaxial 3D printing, biomaterials, proximal tubule, cystinosis, in vitro modeling, kidney, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Genderen, A M V, G Valverde, M, Capendale, P E, Kersten, V, Sendino Garví, E, Schuurmans, C C L, Ruelas, M, Soeiro, J T, Tang, G, Janssen, M J, Jansen, J, Mihăilă, S M, Vermonden, T, Zhang, Y S & Masereeuw, R 2022, 'Co-axial Printing of Convoluted Proximal Tubule for Kidney Disease Modeling', Biofabrication, vol. 14, no. 4, 044102, pp. 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1088/1758-5090/ac7895