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Organogenesis Forum

Organogenesis of Kidney and Endocrine Pancreas: The Window Opens

Marc Hammerman

volume 3 | issue 2

october/november/december 2007

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Growing new organs in situ by implanting developing animal organ primordia (organogenesis) represents a novel solution to the problem of limited supply for human donor organs that offers advantages relative to transplanting embryonic stem (ES) cells or xenotransplantation of developed organs. Successful transplantation of organ primordia depends on obtaining them at defined windows during embryonic development within which the risk of teratogenicity is eliminated, growth potential is maximized, and immunogenicity is reduced. We and others have shown that renal primordia transplanted into the mesentery undergo differentiation and growth, become vascularized by blood vessels of host origin, exhibit excretory function and support life in otherwise anephric hosts. Renal primordia can be transplanted across isogeneic, allogeneic or xenogeneic barriers. Pancreatic primordia can be transplanted across the same barriers undergo growth, and differentiation of endocrine components only and secrete insulin in a physiological manner following mesenteric placement. Insulin-secreting cells originating from embryonic day (E) 28 (E28) pig pancreatic primordia transplanted into the mesentery of streptozotocin-diabetic (type 1) Lewis rats or ZDF diabetic (type 2) rats or STZ-diabetic rhesus macaques engraft without the need for host immune-suppression. Our findings in diabetic macaques represent the first steps in the opening of a window for a novel treatment of diabetes in humans.

Authors

Marc Hammerman

George M. O'Brien Center for Kidney Disease Research, Renal Division, Departments of Medicine and Cell Biology and Physiology; Washington University School of Medicine; St. Louis MO USA


Purchase article for $19

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