Close Menu
AM ChronicleAM Chronicle
  • Content
    • News
    • Insights
    • Case Studies
    • AM Infocast
  • Focus Regions
    • India
    • Asia Pacific
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • Europe
  • Industries
    • Automotive
    • Aerospace
    • Defence
    • Energy
    • Construction
    • Healthcare
    • Tooling
    • Engineering
  • Training
  • Magazine
    • Digital Issues
    • Print Subscription
  • Events
Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
  • About us
  • Media Kit
  • Contact us
Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
AM ChronicleAM Chronicle
  • Content
    1. News
    2. Insights
    3. Case Studies
    4. AM Infocast
    5. View All
    Ryan Watkins (center) receiving the Advanced Finishing award from Bonnie Meyer (left) and Corey Wardrop.

    Additive Manufacturing Users Group Names Technical Competition Winners

    May 3, 2025
    India Launches 3D Printed Concrete Artificial Reef Project to Boost Marine Biodiversity

    India Launches 3D Printed Concrete Artificial Reef Project to Boost Marine Biodiversity

    April 19, 2025
    AO Metal

    Additive Plus Launches AO Metal – Compact Metal 3D Printers for R&D Labs, Universities, and Small-Scale Manufacturing

    April 19, 2025
    Credits: Haddy

    U.S.-Based Haddy Launches the World’s Largest 3D Printing Factory

    April 12, 2025
    Pre-Launching Poster of Revopoint Trackit Source: Revopoint

    Revopoint Trackit Optical Tracking 3D Scanner is Launching on Kickstarter Soon!

    May 5, 2025
    Blue White Simple Financial Tips Blog Banner 19

    How 4 Industries Are Transforming with Polymer 3D Printing

    April 25, 2025
    Raman 2 Engine, Credits: Skyroot

    India’s Skyroot Aerospace Tests 3D-Printed Vacuum Engine for Spaceflight

    April 21, 2025
    Customized Medicine

    How 3D Printing is Revolutionizing Customized Medicine

    April 17, 2025
    Formlabs fuse 1+

    How Imaginarium Helped Kaash Studio Scale with the Right 3D Printing Technology

    April 12, 2025
    The Formlabs Fuse 1+ 30W

    Kaash Studio Optimized Service Bureau Operations with Formlabs 3D Printers- Case Study

    January 30, 2025
    Namthaja Unveils Worlds First 3D Printed Marine Gangway

    Worlds First 3D Printed Marine Gangway unveiled by Namthaja

    August 8, 2024
    RusselSmith Material Performance Improvement Whitepaper

    RusselSmith Whitepaper : Improving Material Performance with Microstructural Refinement

    May 9, 2024
    Sustainable Production of Metal Powder for Additive Manufacturing

    Sustainable Production of Metal Powder for Additive Manufacturing with Bruce Bradshaw

    February 15, 2024
    Meeting Evolving Customer Demands in the Additive Manufacturing Industry with Tyler Reid

    Meeting Evolving Customer Demands in the Additive Manufacturing Industry with Tyler Reid

    February 9, 2024
    Innovation is at the heart of AMUG with Diana Kalisz

    Innovation is at the heart of AMUG with Diana Kalisz

    March 7, 2023
    3D Printing Workshops at AMUG with Edward Graham

    3D Printing Workshops at AMUG with Edward Graham

    March 7, 2023
    Pre-Launching Poster of Revopoint Trackit Source: Revopoint

    Revopoint Trackit Optical Tracking 3D Scanner is Launching on Kickstarter Soon!

    May 5, 2025
    Ryan Watkins (center) receiving the Advanced Finishing award from Bonnie Meyer (left) and Corey Wardrop.

    Additive Manufacturing Users Group Names Technical Competition Winners

    May 3, 2025
    Blue White Simple Financial Tips Blog Banner 19

    How 4 Industries Are Transforming with Polymer 3D Printing

    April 25, 2025
    Raman 2 Engine, Credits: Skyroot

    India’s Skyroot Aerospace Tests 3D-Printed Vacuum Engine for Spaceflight

    April 21, 2025
  • Focus Regions
    • India
    • Asia Pacific
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • Europe
  • Industries
    • Automotive
    • Aerospace
    • Defence
    • Energy
    • Construction
    • Healthcare
    • Tooling
    • Engineering
  • Training
  • Magazine
    • Digital Issues
    • Print Subscription
  • Events
Subscribe
AM ChronicleAM Chronicle
Home » News

3D bioprinted proximal tubules mimic human kidney functions

News By AM Chronicle EditorMarch 5, 20195 Mins Read
kidney tubules
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp Pinterest Email Copy Link

Wyss Institute Core Faculty member Jennifer Lewis, Sc.D. is leading some of the most advanced and yet very real progress in 3D bioprinting. Unlike others, her team is not promising 3D bioprinted organs for transplants any time soon but nevertheless her research does focus on the body’s most complex biostructures, such as kidneys. In this latest study, Prof. Lewis and her team working within the Wyss Institute’s 3D Organ Engineering Initiative that she co-leads (and in collaboration with the Roche Innovation Center Basel in Switzerland), focused on renal reabsorption outside the human body, and specifically on proximal tubules.

As shown in the video above, in order to do this, the Harvard team created a 3D vascularized proximal tubule model in which independently perfusable tubules and blood vessels are printed adjacent to one another within an engineered extracellular matrix.

A proximal tubule is a specialized structure that reabsorbs good molecules after the blood has been filtered by the kidneys and return them to the bloodstream. While the reabsorptive functions of the proximal tubule can be compromised by drugs, chemicals, or genetic and blood-borne diseases, our understanding of how these effects occur is still limited. Yet their importance is enormous as kidneys tackle the daunting task of continuously cleaning our blood to prevent waste, salt and excess fluid from building up inside our bodies.

Vascularizing kidney parts

Prof. Lewis led the study on bioprinted kidney proximal tubules models
Prof. Lewis is also the Hansjörg Wyss Professor of Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS), the Jianmin Yu Professor of Arts and Sciences, and a member of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute.

This work builds upon a continuously perfused 3D proximal tubule model reported earlier by the team that still was lacking a functional blood vessel compartment. Using their next-generation device, the team has measured the transport of glucose from the proximal tubule to the blood vessels, along with the effects of hyperglycemia, a condition associated with diabetes in patients. Their study is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

“We construct these living renal devices in a few days and they can remain stable and functional for months,” said first-author Neil Lin, Ph.D., who is a Roche Fellow and Postdoctoral Fellow on Lewis’ team. “Importantly, these 3D vascularized proximal tubules exhibit the desired epithelial and endothelial cell morphologies and luminal architectures, as well as the expression and correct localization of key structural and transport proteins, and factors that allow the tubular and vascular compartments to communicate with each other.”

proximal tubules
Immunofluorescence staining of a 3D bioprinted vascularized proximal tubule with a proximal tubule epithelial marker stained in green in the proximal tubule channel and a vascular endothelial marker stained in red in the adjacent vascular channel. The magnified cross-section illustrates that the two different cell types form luminal perfusable structures in their respective channels.Credit: Wyss Institute at Harvard University.

Bioprinting to fix kidneys (instead of replacing them)

As a first step towards testing drugs and modeling diseases, the team induced “hyperglycemia”, a high-glucose condition typical of diabetes and a known risk factor for vascular disease, in their model by circulating a four-fold higher than normal glucose concentration through the proximal tubule compartment.

“We found that high levels of glucose transported to endothelial cells in the vascular compartment caused cell damage,” said Kimberly Homan, Ph.D., a co-author on the study and Research Associate in Lewis’ group at the Wyss Institute and SEAS. “By circulating a drug through the tubule that specifically inhibits a major glucose transporter in proximal tubule epithelial cells, we prevented those harmful changes from happening to the endothelial cells in the adjacent vessels.”

The team’s immediate focus is to further scale up these models for use in pharmaceutical applications. “Our system could enable the screening of focused drug libraries for renal toxicity and thus help reduce animal experiments,” said Annie Moisan, Ph.D., a co-author and industry collaborator on the study, and Principal Scientist at Roche Innovation Center Basel. “I am thrilled by the continued efforts from us and others to increase the physiological relevance of such models, for example by incorporating patient-specific and diseased cells, since personalized efficacy and safety are the ultimate goals of predicting clinical responses to drugs.”

proximal tubules
Shown with cellular resolution, cells in both the proximal tubule epithelial channel (red) and the vascular channel (green) have mature typical morphologies and seamlessly cover their respective channel surfaces to form a proximal tubule and blood vessel. Credit: Wyss Institute at Harvard University.

“Our new 3D kidney model is an exciting advance as it more fully recapitulates the proximal tubule segments found in native kidney tissue,” said Lewis. “Beyond its immediate applications for drug screening and disease modeling, we are also exploring whether these living devices can be used to augment kidney dialysis.” Currently, life-saving dialysis machines filter blood, but they are unable to retrieve precious nutrients and other species from the filtrate that the body needs for many of its functions, which can cause specific deficiencies and complications down the line. Lewis and her colleagues believe that 3D bioprinted vascularized tubules may lead to improved renal replacement therapies.

“This study presents a significant step forward in human kidney engineering that enables human disease and drug-related studies to be carried out over extended periods of time in vitro. It also represents a major step forward for the Wyss Institute’s 3D Organ Engineering Initiative, which aims to generate functional organ replacements with enhanced functionalities for patients in need,” said Wyss Institute Founding Director Donald Ingber, M.D., Ph.D., who is also the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at HMS and the Vascular Biology Program at Boston Children’s Hospital, as well as Professor of Bioengineering at SEAS.

The study was also authored by present and past members of Lewis’ team Sanlin Robinson, Ph.D., David Kolesky, Ph.D., and Nathan Duarte. It was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health, Harvard’s Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, a Roche Postdoctoral Fellowship, and a donation from the GETTYLAB.

e22cc466a6e7392fb7e2617b2e35c0d1?s=120&d=mp&r=g
AM Chronicle Editor
3D bioprinted vascularized proximal tubule 3d bioprinting 3D Organ Engineering Initiative GETTYLAB Harvard team Harvard University I3DPn Indian 3D Printing Network kidney Wyss Institute
AM Chronicle Editor

LATEST FROM AM
Pre-Launching Poster of Revopoint Trackit Source: Revopoint Insights

Revopoint Trackit Optical Tracking 3D Scanner is Launching on Kickstarter Soon!

May 5, 20253 Mins Read
Ryan Watkins (center) receiving the Advanced Finishing award from Bonnie Meyer (left) and Corey Wardrop. News

Additive Manufacturing Users Group Names Technical Competition Winners

May 3, 20255 Mins Read
Blue White Simple Financial Tips Blog Banner 19 Insights

How 4 Industries Are Transforming with Polymer 3D Printing

April 25, 20254 Mins Read

CONNECT WITH US

  • 126 A, Dhuruwadi, A. V. Nagvekar Marg, Prabhadevi, Mumbai 400025
  • [email protected]
  • +91 022 24306319
Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

Newsletter

Subscribe to the AM Chronicle mailer to receive latest tech updates and insights from global industry experts.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Quick Links

  • News
  • Insights
  • Case Studies
  • AM Training
  • AM Infocast
  • AM Magazine
  • Events

Media

  • Advertise with us
  • Sponsored Articles
  • Media Kit

Events

  • AM Conclave 2025
    24-25 September 2025 | ADNEC, Abu Dhabi
  • AMTECH 2025
    3-4 December 2025 | KTPO, Whitefield, Bengaluru
CNT Expositions & Services LLP
© 2025 CNT Expositions & Services LLP.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.



0 / 75