Journal article
Returning to kidney development to deliver synthetic kidneys
MH Little
Developmental Biology | ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE | Published : 2021
Abstract
There is no doubt that the development of transplantable synthetic kidneys could improve the outcome for the many millions of people worldwide suffering from chronic kidney disease. Substantial progress has been made in the last 6 years in the generation of kidney tissue from stem cells. However, the limited scale, incomplete cellular complexity and functional immaturity of such structures suggests we are some way from this goal. While developmental biology has successfully guided advances to date, these human kidney models are limited in their capacity for ongoing nephrogenesis and lack corticomedullary definition, a unified vasculature and a coordinated exit path for urinary filtrate. This..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by National Institutes of Health
Funding Acknowledgements
M.H.L. is a Senior Principal Research Fellow of the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (GNT1136085). Her research is supported by the National Institute of Health as part of ReBuilding a Kidney (DK107344), the NHMRC (GNT1156440), Australian Research Council (DP190101705) and the Medical Research Future Fund.