Deciphering Endothelial and Mesenchymal Organ Specification in Vascularized Lung and Intestinal Organoids

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Abstract

To investigate the co-development of vasculature, mesenchyme, and epithelium crucial for organogenesis and the acquisition of organ-specific characteristics, we constructed a human pluripotent stem cell-derived organoid system comprising lung or intestinal epithelium surrounded by organotypic mesenchyme and vasculature. We demonstrated the pivotal role of co-differentiating mesoderm and endoderm via precise BMP regulation in generating multilineage organoids and gut tube patterning. Single-cell RNA-seq analysis revealed organ specificity in endothelium and mesenchyme, and uncovered key ligands driving endothelial specification in the lung (e.g., WNT2B and Semaphorins) or intestine (e.g., GDF15). Upon transplantation under the kidney capsule in mice, these organoids further matured and developed perfusable human-specific sub-epithelial capillaries. Additionally, our model recapitulated the abnormal endothelial-epithelial crosstalk in patients with FOXF1 deletion or mutations. Multilineage organoids provide a unique platform to study developmental cues guiding endothelial and mesenchymal cell fate determination, and investigate intricate cell-cell communications in human organogenesis and disease.

Highlights

  • BMP signaling fine-tunes the co-differentiation of mesoderm and endoderm.

  • The cellular composition in multilineage organoids resembles that of human fetal organs.

  • Mesenchyme and endothelium co-developed within the organoids adopt organ-specific characteristics.

  • Multilineage organoids recapitulate abnormal endothelial-epithelial crosstalk in FOXF1-associated disorders.

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