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1.
Micromachines (Basel) ; 13(9)2022 Aug 25.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36144007

Kidney diseases often lack optimal treatments, causing millions of deaths each year. Thus, developing appropriate model systems to study human kidney disease is of utmost importance. Some of the most promising human kidney models are organoids or small organ-resembling tissue collectives, derived from human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs). However, they are more akin to a first-trimester fetal kidney than an adult kidney. Therefore, new strategies are needed to advance their maturity. They have great potential for disease modeling and eventually auxiliary therapy if they can reach the maturity of an adult kidney. In this review, we will discuss the current state of kidney organoids in terms of their similarity to the human kidney and use as a disease modeling system thus far. We will then discuss potential pathways to advance the maturity of kidney organoids to match an adult kidney for more accurate human disease modeling.

2.
J Med Genet ; 59(11): 1035-1043, 2022 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35115415

BACKGROUND: Nephrolithiasis (NL) is a complex multifactorial disease affecting up to 10%-20% of the human population and causing a significant burden on public health systems worldwide. It results from a combination of environmental and genetic factors. Hyperoxaluria is a major risk factor for NL. METHODS: We used a whole exome-based approach in a patient with calcium oxalate NL. The effects of the mutation were characterised using cell culture and in silico analyses. RESULTS: We identified a rare heterozygous missense mutation (c.1519C>T/p.R507W) in the SLC26A6 gene that encodes a secretory oxalate transporter. This mutation cosegregated with hyperoxaluria in the family. In vitro characterisation of mutant SLC26A6 demonstrated that Cl--dependent oxalate transport was dramatically reduced because the mutation affects both SLC26A6 transport activity and membrane surface expression. Cotransfection studies demonstrated strong dominant-negative effects of the mutant on the wild-type protein indicating that the phenotype of patients heterozygous for this mutation may be more severe than predicted by haploinsufficiency alone. CONCLUSION: Our study is in line with previous observations made in the mouse showing that SLC26A6 inactivation can cause inherited enteric hyperoxaluria with calcium oxalate NL. Consistent with an enteric form of hyperoxaluria, we observed a beneficial effect of increasing calcium in the patient's diet to reduce urinary oxalate excretion.


Antiporters , Hyperoxaluria , Nephrolithiasis , Sulfate Transporters , Humans , Antiporters/genetics , Calcium/metabolism , Calcium Oxalate/metabolism , Hyperoxaluria/complications , Hyperoxaluria/genetics , Mutation , Nephrolithiasis/genetics , Nephrolithiasis/complications , Nephrolithiasis/metabolism , Oxalates/metabolism , Sulfate Transporters/genetics
3.
Am J Psychol ; 122(2): 235-47, 2009.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19507429

An experimenter presented familiar and bizarre action statements (e.g., "Rest on the fire hydrant" vs. "Shake hands with the fire hydrant") to a participant and confederate during a campus walk. They watched the experimenter perform half the actions and imagined the experimenter performing the other half. One day later, they took a second walk where actions were only imagined. Some actions from the first walk were repeated, and new actions were added. Two weeks later, the participant and confederate collaboratively recalled whether specific actions were presented in the first walk and, if so, whether they were imagined or performed. For different actions, the confederate was accurate, was inaccurate, or provided no information. When later tested individually, participants demonstrated imagination inflation by falsely remembering familiar and bizarre actions as performed on the first walk that were merely imagined on the second. These memory errors were greatly reduced if the confederate was accurate during collaborative recall.


Cooperative Behavior , Imagination , Mental Recall , Repression, Psychology , Adolescent , Association Learning , Attention , Female , Humans , Judgment , Male , Social Environment , Young Adult
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