Litcius/Paper detail

Organoid Models for Infectious Disease

Sarah E. Blutt, Mary K. Estes

2021Annual Review of Medicine76 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Infectious diseases affect individual health and have widespread societal impacts. New ex vivo models are critical to understand pathogenesis, host response, and features necessary to develop preventive and therapeutic treatments. Pluripotent and tissue stem cell-derived organoids provide new tools for the study of human infections. Organoid models recapitulate many characteristics of in vivo disease and are providing new insights into human respiratory, gastrointestinal, and neuronal host-microbe interactions. Increasing culture complexity by adding the stroma, interorgan communication, and the microbiome will improve the use of organoids as models for infection. Organoid cultures provide a platform with the capability to improve human health related to infectious diseases.

Topics & Concepts

OrganoidMicrobiomeInduced pluripotent stem cellBiologyEx vivoDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)Computational biologyStem cellImmunologyIn vivoBioinformaticsMedicineNeurosciencePathologyGeneCell biologyGeneticsEmbryonic stem cell3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchCancer Cells and MetastasisBiomedical and Engineering Education