Abstract

Recent biotechnical advances in the in vitro culture of cholangiocytes and generation of bioengineered biliary tissue have a high potential for creating biliary tissue to be used for disease modeling, drug screening, and transplantation. For the past few decades, scientists have searched for a source of cholangiocytes, focused on primary cholangiocytes or cholangiocytes derived from hepatocytes or stem cells. At the same time, the development of scaffolds for biliary tissue engineering for transplantation and modeling of cholangiopathies has been explored. In this review, we provide an overview on the current understanding of cholangiocytes sources, the effect of signaling molecules, and transcription factors on cell differentiation, along with the effects of extracellular matrix molecules and scaffolds on bioengineered biliary tissues, and their application in disease modeling and drug screening. Impact statement Over the past few decades, biliary tissue engineering has acquired significant attention, but currently a number of factors hinder this field to eventually generate bioengineered bile ducts that mimic in vivo physiology and are suitable for transplantation. In this review, we present the latest advances with respect to cell source selection, influence of growth factors and scaffolds, and functional characterization, as well as applications in cholangiopathy modeling and drug screening. This review is suited for a broad spectrum of readers, including fundamental liver researchers and clinicians with interest in the current state and application of bile duct engineering and disease modeling.

Highlights

  • The biliary tract is a highly complex architectural and functional system in the human body, comprised by the liver, bile ducts, and gallbladder

  • Bile is secreted into the bile canaliculi and flows through the bile ducts that are lined by biliary epithelial cells, termed cholangiocytes, responsible for the final bile composition.[1]

  • We focus on strategies of human cholangiocyte differentiation and the heterogeneity of obtained cell types

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Summary

Impact Statement

Over the past few decades, biliary tissue engineering has acquired significant attention, but currently a number of factors hinder this field to eventually generate bioengineered bile ducts that mimic in vivo physiology and are suitable for transplantation. We present the latest advances with respect to cell source selection, influence of growth factors and scaffolds, and functional characterization, as well as applications in cholangiopathy modeling and drug screening. This review is suited for a broad spectrum of readers, including fundamental liver researchers and clinicians with interest in the current state and application of bile duct engineering and disease modeling

Introduction
Cell and Tissue Sources for Bile Duct Engineering
Adult cell sources
Cell transplantation
Incomplete functionality
Stem cells
Enhancing Directed Differentiation Toward Cholangiocytes
Characterization of CLC Application purposes
Application purposes
Signaling pathways
Transcriptional regulation
ECM molecules
Functional Characterization of Differentiated Cholangiocytes
Expressed in large rodent ducts
Cytoskeleton markers
Transporters and channels
Nuclear receptors
Modeling Cholangiopathy in Bioengineered Bile Ducts
Future Outlook
Full Text
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