Cargando…

Development and characterization of human fetal female reproductive tract organoids to understand Müllerian duct anomalies

Müllerian ducts are paired tubular structures that give rise to most of the female reproductive organs. Any abnormalities in the development and differentiation of these ducts lead to anatomical defects in the female reproductive tract organs categorized as Müllerian duct anomalies. Due to the limit...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Venkata, Varshini D., Jamaluddin, M. Fairuz B., Goad, Jyoti, Drury, Hannah R., Tadros, Melissa A., Lim, Rebecca, Karakoti, Ajay, O’Sullivan, Rachel, Ius, Yvette, Jaaback, Kenneth, Nahar, Pravin, Tanwar, Pradeep S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9335258/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35858415
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2118054119
_version_ 1784759296349700096
author Venkata, Varshini D.
Jamaluddin, M. Fairuz B.
Goad, Jyoti
Drury, Hannah R.
Tadros, Melissa A.
Lim, Rebecca
Karakoti, Ajay
O’Sullivan, Rachel
Ius, Yvette
Jaaback, Kenneth
Nahar, Pravin
Tanwar, Pradeep S.
author_facet Venkata, Varshini D.
Jamaluddin, M. Fairuz B.
Goad, Jyoti
Drury, Hannah R.
Tadros, Melissa A.
Lim, Rebecca
Karakoti, Ajay
O’Sullivan, Rachel
Ius, Yvette
Jaaback, Kenneth
Nahar, Pravin
Tanwar, Pradeep S.
author_sort Venkata, Varshini D.
collection PubMed
description Müllerian ducts are paired tubular structures that give rise to most of the female reproductive organs. Any abnormalities in the development and differentiation of these ducts lead to anatomical defects in the female reproductive tract organs categorized as Müllerian duct anomalies. Due to the limited access to fetal tissues, little is understood of human reproductive tract development and the associated anomalies. Although organoids represent a powerful model to decipher human development and disease, such organoids from fetal reproductive organs are not available. Here, we developed organoids from human fetal fallopian tubes and uteri and compared them with their adult counterparts. Our results demonstrate that human fetal reproductive tract epithelia do not express some of the typical markers of adult reproductive tract epithelia. Furthermore, fetal organoids are grossly, histologically, and proteomically different from adult organoids. While external supplementation of WNT ligands or activators in culture medium is an absolute requirement for the adult reproductive tract organoids, fetal organoids are able to grow in WNT-deficient conditions. We also developed decellularized tissue scaffolds from adult human fallopian tubes and uteri. Transplantation of fetal organoids onto these scaffolds led to the regeneration of the adult fallopian tube and uterine epithelia. Importantly, suppression of Wnt signaling, which is altered in patients with Müllerian duct anomalies, inhibits the regenerative ability of human fetal organoids and causes severe anatomical defects in the mouse reproductive tract. Thus, our fetal organoids represent an important platform to study the underlying basis of human female reproductive tract development and diseases.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9335258
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher National Academy of Sciences
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-93352582023-01-18 Development and characterization of human fetal female reproductive tract organoids to understand Müllerian duct anomalies Venkata, Varshini D. Jamaluddin, M. Fairuz B. Goad, Jyoti Drury, Hannah R. Tadros, Melissa A. Lim, Rebecca Karakoti, Ajay O’Sullivan, Rachel Ius, Yvette Jaaback, Kenneth Nahar, Pravin Tanwar, Pradeep S. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Biological Sciences Müllerian ducts are paired tubular structures that give rise to most of the female reproductive organs. Any abnormalities in the development and differentiation of these ducts lead to anatomical defects in the female reproductive tract organs categorized as Müllerian duct anomalies. Due to the limited access to fetal tissues, little is understood of human reproductive tract development and the associated anomalies. Although organoids represent a powerful model to decipher human development and disease, such organoids from fetal reproductive organs are not available. Here, we developed organoids from human fetal fallopian tubes and uteri and compared them with their adult counterparts. Our results demonstrate that human fetal reproductive tract epithelia do not express some of the typical markers of adult reproductive tract epithelia. Furthermore, fetal organoids are grossly, histologically, and proteomically different from adult organoids. While external supplementation of WNT ligands or activators in culture medium is an absolute requirement for the adult reproductive tract organoids, fetal organoids are able to grow in WNT-deficient conditions. We also developed decellularized tissue scaffolds from adult human fallopian tubes and uteri. Transplantation of fetal organoids onto these scaffolds led to the regeneration of the adult fallopian tube and uterine epithelia. Importantly, suppression of Wnt signaling, which is altered in patients with Müllerian duct anomalies, inhibits the regenerative ability of human fetal organoids and causes severe anatomical defects in the mouse reproductive tract. Thus, our fetal organoids represent an important platform to study the underlying basis of human female reproductive tract development and diseases. National Academy of Sciences 2022-07-18 2022-07-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9335258/ /pubmed/35858415 http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2118054119 Text en Copyright © 2022 the Author(s). Published by PNAS https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Venkata, Varshini D.
Jamaluddin, M. Fairuz B.
Goad, Jyoti
Drury, Hannah R.
Tadros, Melissa A.
Lim, Rebecca
Karakoti, Ajay
O’Sullivan, Rachel
Ius, Yvette
Jaaback, Kenneth
Nahar, Pravin
Tanwar, Pradeep S.
Development and characterization of human fetal female reproductive tract organoids to understand Müllerian duct anomalies
title Development and characterization of human fetal female reproductive tract organoids to understand Müllerian duct anomalies
title_full Development and characterization of human fetal female reproductive tract organoids to understand Müllerian duct anomalies
title_fullStr Development and characterization of human fetal female reproductive tract organoids to understand Müllerian duct anomalies
title_full_unstemmed Development and characterization of human fetal female reproductive tract organoids to understand Müllerian duct anomalies
title_short Development and characterization of human fetal female reproductive tract organoids to understand Müllerian duct anomalies
title_sort development and characterization of human fetal female reproductive tract organoids to understand müllerian duct anomalies
topic Biological Sciences
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9335258/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35858415
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2118054119
work_keys_str_mv AT venkatavarshinid developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT jamaluddinmfairuzb developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT goadjyoti developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT druryhannahr developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT tadrosmelissaa developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT limrebecca developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT karakotiajay developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT osullivanrachel developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT iusyvette developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT jaabackkenneth developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT naharpravin developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies
AT tanwarpradeeps developmentandcharacterizationofhumanfetalfemalereproductivetractorganoidstounderstandmullerianductanomalies