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Abstract

Tissue Engineering Part A 2023, 29, 102-111

Inhibition of Transforming Growth Factor Improves Primary Renal Tubule Cell Differentiation in Long-Term Culture

Hunter K, Larsen JA, Love HD, Evans RC, Roy S, Harris RC, Wilson MH, Fissell WH

Cell therapy of renal failure requires qualitative and quantitative fidelity between in vitro and in vivo phenotypes, which has been elusive. We show that control of transforming growth factor-beta signaling can promote differentiation of renal tubule cells grown in artificial environments. This is a key enabling step for cell therapy of renal failure.

Patient-oriented applications of cell culture include cell therapy of organ failure like chronic renal failure. Clinical deployment of a cell-based device for artificial renal replacement requires qualitative and quantitative fidelity of a cultured cell to its in vivo counterpart. Active specific apicobasal ion transport reabsorbs 90-99% of the filtered load of salt and water in the kidney. In a bioengineered kidney, tubular transport concentrates wastes and eliminates the need for hemodialysis, but renal tubule cells in culture transport little or no salt and water due to dedifferentiation that mammalian cells undergo in vitro thereby losing important cell-type specific functions. We previously identified transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) as a signaling pathway necessary for in vitro differentiation of renal tubule cells. Inhibition of TGF-beta receptor-1 led to active and inhibitable electrolyte and water transport by primary human renal tubule epithelial cells in vitro. Addition of metformin increased transport, in the context of a transient effect on 5 '-AMP-activated kinase phosphorylation. These data motivated us to examine whether increased transport was an idiosyncratic effect of SB431542, probe pathways downstream of TGF-beta receptors possibly responsible for the improved differentiation, evaluate whether TGF-beta inhibition induced a range of differentiated tubule functions, and to explore crosstalk between the effects of SB431542 and metformin. In this study, we use multiple small-molecule inhibitors of canonical and noncanonical pathways to confirm that inhibition of canonical TGF-beta signaling caused the increased apicobasal transport. Hallmarks of proximal tubule cell function, including sodium reabsorption, para-amino hippurate excretion, and glucose uptake increased with TGF-beta inhibition, and the specificity of the response was shown using inhibitors of each transport protein. We did not find any evidence of crosstalk between metformin and SB431542. These data suggest that the TGF-beta signaling pathway governs multiple features of differentiation in renal proximal tubule cells in vitro. Inhibition of TGF-beta by pharmacologic or genome engineering approaches may be a viable approach to enhancing differentiated function of tubule cells in vitro.