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Open questions in human lung organoid research

Affiliation
Wellcome Trust/CRUK Gurdon Institute and Department Physiology ,Development and Neuroscience ,University of Cambridge ,Cambridge ,United Kingdom
Hughes, Tessa;
Affiliation
Department of Molecular Oncology and Immunology ,The Netherlands Cancer Institute ,Amsterdam ,Netherlands
Dijkstra, Krijn K.;
Affiliation
Wellcome Trust/CRUK Gurdon Institute and Department Physiology ,Development and Neuroscience ,University of Cambridge ,Cambridge ,United Kingdom
Rawlins, Emma L.;
Affiliation
Epithelial Cell Biology in ENT Research (EpiCENTR) Group ,Developmental Biology and Cancer Department ,Great Ormond Street UCL Institute of Child Health ,University College London ,London ,United Kingdom
Hynds, Robert E.

Organoids have become a prominent model system in pulmonary research. The ability to establish organoid cultures directly from patient tissue has expanded the repertoire of physiologically relevant preclinical model systems. In addition to their derivation from adult lung stem/progenitor cells, lung organoids can be derived from fetal tissue or induced pluripotent stem cells to fill a critical gap in modelling pulmonary development in vitro . Recent years have seen important progress in the characterisation and refinement of organoid culture systems. Here, we address several open questions in the field, including how closely organoids recapitulate the tissue of origin, how well organoids recapitulate patient cohorts, and how well organoids capture diversity within a patient. We advocate deeper characterisation of models using single cell technologies, generation of more diverse organoid biobanks and further standardisation of culture media.

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License Holder: Copyright © 2023 Hughes, Dijkstra, Rawlins and Hynds.

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