Chemically-defined and scalable culture system for intestinal stem cells derived from human intestinal organoids

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Abstract

Three-dimensional human intestinal organoids (hIO) are widely used as a platform for biological and biomedical research. However, reproducibility and challenges for large-scale expansion limit their applicability. Here, we establish a human intestinal stem cell (ISC) culture method expanded under feeder-free and fully defined conditions through selective enrichment of ISC populations (ISC3D-hIO) within hIO derived from human pluripotent stem cells. The intrinsic self-organisation property of ISC3D-hIO, combined with air-liquid interface culture in a minimally defined medium, forces ISC3D-hIO to differentiate into the intestinal epithelium with cellular diversity, villus-like structure, and barrier integrity. Notably, ISC3D-hIO is an ideal cell source for gene editing to study ISC biology and transplantation for intestinal diseases. We demonstrate the intestinal epithelium differentiated from ISC3D-hIO as a model system to study severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 viral infection. ISC3D-hIO culture technology provides a biological tool for use in regenerative medicine and disease modelling.

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Kwon, O., Lee, H., Jung, J., Son, Y. S., Jeon, S., Yoo, W. D., … Son, M. Y. (2024). Chemically-defined and scalable culture system for intestinal stem cells derived from human intestinal organoids. Nature Communications , 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45103-7

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