Cells (Jul 2022)

A 3D In Vivo Model for Studying Human Renal Cystic Tissue and Mouse Kidney Slices

  • Eva-Marie Bichlmayer,
  • Lina Mahl,
  • Leo Hesse,
  • Eric Pion,
  • Victoria Haller,
  • Andreas Moehwald,
  • Christina Hackl,
  • Jens M. Werner,
  • Hans J. Schlitt,
  • Siegfried Schwarz,
  • Philipp Kainz,
  • Christoph Brochhausen,
  • Christian Groeger,
  • Felix Steger,
  • Oliver Kölbl,
  • Christoph Daniel,
  • Kerstin Amann,
  • Andre Kraus,
  • Björn Buchholz,
  • Thiha Aung,
  • Silke Haerteis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells11152269
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 15
p. 2269

Abstract

Read online

(1) Background: Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is a frequent monogenic disorder that leads to progressive renal cyst growth and renal failure. Strategies to inhibit cyst growth in non-human cyst models have often failed in clinical trials. There is a significant need for models that enable studies of human cyst growth and drug trials. (2) Methods: Renal tissue from ADPKD patients who received a nephrectomy as well as adult mouse kidney slices were cultured on a chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) for one week. The cyst volume was monitored by microscopic and CT-based applications. The weight and angiogenesis were quantified. Morphometric and histological analyses were performed after the removal of the tissues from the CAM. (3) Results: The mouse and human renal tissue mostly remained vital for about one week on the CAM. The growth of cystic tissue was evaluated using microscopic and CT-based volume measurements, which correlated with weight and an increase in angiogenesis, and was accompanied by cyst cell proliferation. (4) Conclusions: The CAM model might bridge the gap between animal studies and clinical trials of human cyst growth, and provide a drug-testing platform for the inhibition of cyst enlargement. Real-time analyses of mouse kidney tissue may provide insights into renal physiology and reduce the need for animal experiments.

Keywords