Printing a human kidney Anthony Atala

[Music]

there’s actually a major health crisis

today in terms of the shortage of organs

the fact is that we’re living longer

Medicine has done a much better job

making us live longer and the problem is

as we age our organs tend to fail more

and so currently there not enough organs

to go around in fact in the last ten

years a number of patients require an

organ has doubled well in the same time

the actual number of transplants has

barely gone up this is now a public

health crisis so that’s where this field

comes in that we call the field of

regenerative medicine it really involves

many different areas you can use

actually scaffolds biomaterials they’re

like the piece of your blouse or your

shirt but specific materials you can

actually implanted patients and they

will do well and help you regenerate or

we can use cells alone either your very

own cells or different stem cell

populations or we can use both we can

use actually biomaterials and the cells

together and that’s where the field is

today but it’s actually not a new field

interestingly this is a book that was

published back in 1938 titled a culture

of organs the first author Alexis Carrel

and Nobel Prize winner he actually

devised some of the same technologies

used today for suturing blood vessels

and some of the blood vessel grafts were

used today were actually designed by

Alexis but I want you to note his

co-author Charles Lindbergh that’s the

same Charles Lindbergh who actually

spent the rest of his life working with

Alexis at the Rockefeller Institute in

New York in the area of the culture of

organs so the fields been around for so

long why so field clinical advances and

that really has to do to many different

challenges but if I were to point to

three challenges the first one is

actually the design of materials that

could go in your body and do well over

time and many advances now we can do

that fairly readily the second challenge

with cells we could not get enough of

your cells to grow outside of your body

over the last 20 years

years we’ve basically tackled that many

scientists can now grow many different

types of cells plus we have stem cells

but even now 2011 there’s still certain

cells that we just can grow from the

patient liver cells nerve cells

pancreatic cells still can grow them

even today and the third challenge is

vascularity the actual supply of blood

to allow those organs or tissues to

survive once we regenerate them so we

can actually use biomaterials now this

is actually biomaterial we can weave

them knit them or we can make them like

you see here this is actually like a

cotton candy machine you saw this spray

going in that was like the fibers of the

cotton candy creating this structure

this tubular eye structure which is a

biomaterial that we can then use to help

your body regenerate using your very own

cells to do so and that’s exactly what

we did here because it’s actually a

patient who presented with a deceased

organ and we then created one of these

smart biomaterials and we then use that

smart bomb material to replace and

repair that patients structure what we

did was we actually use the biomaterial

as a bridge so that the cells in the

organ could walk on that bridge if you

will and help to bridge the gap to

regenerate that tissue and you see that

patient now six months after with an

x-ray showing you the regenerated tissue

which is fully regenerated when you

analyze it under the microscope we can

also use cells alone these are actually

cells that we obtained these are stem

cells that we create from specific

sources and these are we can drive them

to chem heart cells and they start

beating in culture so they know what to

do the cells genetically know what to

then they start beating together now

today many clinical trials using

different kinds of stem cells for heart

disease so that’s actually now in

patients or if we’re going to use larger

structures to replace larger structures

we can then use the patient’s own cells

or some cell population and the

biomaterials the scaffolds together

so the concept here is if you do have a

or injured organ we take a very small

piece of that tissue listen half the

size of a postage stamp

we then tease the cells apart we grow

the cells outside the body we then take

a scaffold a biomaterial

again looks very much like a piece of

your blouse or your shirt

we then shape that material and we then

use those cells to code that material

one layer at a time very much like

baking a layer cake if you will we then

place that in an oven-like device and

we’re able to create that structure and

bring it out this is actually a hard

valve that we have engineered and you

can see here we have the structure of

the heart valve and we’ve seated that

with cells and then we exercise that you

so you see the leaflets opening and

closing of this heart valve that’s

currently being used experimentally to

try to get it to to further studies

another technology we have used in

patients actually involves bladders we

actually take a very small piece of a

bladder from the patient less than half

the size of a postage stamp

we then grow the cells outside the body

take the scaffold coat the scaffold with

the cells the patient’s own cells two

different cell types we then put it in

this oven like device has the same

conditions as a human body 37 degrees

centigrade 95% oxygen a few weeks later

you have your engineered organ that

we’re then able to implant back into the

patient for these specific patients we

actually just suture these materials we

use three-dimensional imaging analysis

but we actually created these

biomaterials by hand but we now have

better ways to create these structures

with the cells we use now some type of

technologies where first solid organs

for example like the liver what we do is

we take discard livers as you know a lot

of organs are actually discarded not

used so we can take these liver

structures which are not going to be

used and we then put them in a washing

machine like structure that will allow

the cells to be washed away two weeks

later you have something that looks like

a liver you can hold it like a liver

but it has no cells it’s just a skeleton

of the liver and we then can Reaper fuse

the liver with cells preserving the

blood vessel tree so we actually profuse

first a blood vessel tree with the

patient’s own blood vessel cells and we

then infiltrate the parenchyma with the

liver cells and we not been able just to

show the creation of human liver tissue

just this past month using this

technology another technology that we’ve

used is actually that of printing this

is actually a desktop inkjet printer but

instead of using ink we’re using cells

and you can actually see here the

printhead going through and printing

this structure and it takes about 40

minutes to print this structure and

there’s a 3d elevator that then actually

goes down one layer at a time each time

the printhead goes through then finally

you’re able to get that structure out

you can pop that structure out of the

printer and implant it and this is

actually a piece of bone that I’m going

to show you in this slide that was

actually created with this desktop

printer and implant it as you see here

that’s all new bone that was implanted

using these techniques another more

advanced technology we’re looking at

right now our next generation of

technologies are more sophisticated

printers this particular printer with

worthy signing now is actually 1 we

print right on the patient so what you

see here is I know it sounds funny but

that’s the way it works because in

reality what you want to do is you

actually want to have the patient on the

bed with the wound and you have a

scanner basically a cliff like a flatbed

scanner that’s what you see here on the

right side you see a scanner technology

that first scans the wound on the

patient and then it comes back with the

print hits actually printing the layers

that you require on the patient’s

themselves this is how it actually works

here’s a scanner going through scanning

the wound

once it’s scanned sends information in

layers the correct layers of cells where

they need to be and now you’re going to

see here a demo of is this actually

being done

in a representative wound and we

actually do this with a gel so you can

lift the gel material so once those

cells are on the patient they will stick

where they need to be and this is

actually new technology still under

development we’re also working on more

sophisticated printers because in

reality our biggest challenge are the

solid organs I don’t know if you realize

this but ninety percent of the patients

and the transplant list are actually

waiting for a kidney patients are dying

every day because we don’t have enough

of those organs to go around so this is

more challenging large organ vascular a

lot of blood vessels supply a lot of

cells present so the strategy here is

this is actually a CT scan an x-ray and

we go layer by layer using computerized

morphometric imaging analysis and 3d

reconstruction to get right down to

those patient’s own kidneys we then are

able to actually image those do

360-degree rotation to actually analyze

the kidney in its full volumetric

characteristics and we then are able to

actually take this information and then

scan this in a printing computerized

form so we go layer by layer through the

organ analyzing each layer as we go

through the organ and we then are able

to send that information as you see here

through the computer and actually design

the organ for the patient this actually

shows the actual printer and this

actually shows that printing in fact we

actually have the printer right here so

I’m in while we’ve been talking today

we’ve actually you can actually see the

printer back here in the backstage

that’s actually the actual printer right

now and that’s been printing this kidney

structure that you see here it takes

about seven hours to print the kidneys

this is about three hours into it now

and dr. Kang’s going to walk onstage

right now and we’re actually going to

show you one of these kidneys that we

print a little bit earlier today

put a pair of gloves here

thank you

you’re backwards

so these clothes are a little bit small

on me but here it is you can actually

see that kidney as it was printed

earlier today

that’s a little bit of consistency to it

this is dr. Connie who’s been working

with us in this project and we went a

part of our team Thank You dr. Kahn

appreciate it so this is actually a new

generation this is actually the printer

that you see here on stage and this is

actually a new technologies we’re

working on now in reality you know we

now have a long history of doing this

I’m going to share with you a clip in

terms of technology that we have had in

patients now for a while and this is

actually a very brief clip only about 30

seconds of a patient who actually

received an organ I was really sick I

could barely get out of bed I was

missing school it was just pretty much

miserable I couldn’t you know go out in

play you know basketball at recess

without feeling like I was going to pass

out when I got back inside it was I felt

so sick I was facing basically a

lifetime of dialysis and I don’t even

like to think about what my life would

be like if I was on that so after the

surgery life got a lot better for me I

was able to do more things I was able to

wrestle in high school I became the

captain the team and that was great I

was able to be you know the normal kid

with my friends and because they use my

own cells to you know build this bladder

it’s gonna be with me I got it for life

so I’m all set

these experiments sometimes work and

it’s very cool when they do Luke

come up please

so look before last night when’s the

last time you saw Tony ten years ago

when I had my surgery and it’s really

great to see him

I’m tell us a little about what you’re

doing well right now I’m in college at

the University of Connecticut I’m a

sophomore and studying communications TV

and mass media and basically trying to

live life like a normal kid which I

always wanted growing up but it was hard

to do that when I was born with spina

bifida and my kidneys and bladder

weren’t working I went through about 16

surgeries and it seemed impossible to do

that when I was in kidney failure when I

was ten and this surgery came along and

basically made me who I am - and saved

my life

I’m Tony Dunne hundreds of these what I

know from he’s he’s working really hard

in his lab and coming up with crazy

stuff I know I was one of first ten

people to have this surgery and when I

was ten I didn’t realize how amazing it

was I was a little kid and I was like

yet I’ll have that I’ll have that

surgery I all I wanted to do is to get

better and I didn’t realize how amazing

it really was until now that I’m older

and I see the amazing things that he’s

doing um when you know you got this call

out of the blue I mean

Tony’s really shy and it took a lot of

convincing to get somebody as modest as

Tony to allow us to bring Luke so look

you go to your communications professors

your majoring communications and you ask

them for permission to come to Ted which

might have a little bit to do with

communications and what was their

reaction most of my professors were all

for it and they said bring pictures and

and you know show me the clips online

and I’m happy for you there are a couple

that were a little stubborn but I had to

talk to I pulled him aside well it’s an

honor of privilege to meet you thank you

so much

you

[音乐]

就器官短缺而言,今天实际上存在严重的健康危机

,事实是我们的寿命更长

医学做得更好,

使我们的寿命更长,问题是

随着年龄的增长,我们的器官往往会衰竭更多

因此,目前没有足够的器官可供使用

事实上在过去十年中,

许多患者需要

器官在同一时间翻了一番

,实际移植数量

几乎没有增加这现在是一场

公共卫生危机,所以这就是

这个领域的出现,我们称之为

再生医学领域,它确实涉及

许多不同的领域,你可以使用

实际上支架生物材料它们

就像你的衬衫或衬衫的一块,

但你可以

实际植入患者的特定材料,他们

会做得很好 帮助您再生,或者

我们可以单独使用您

自己的细胞或不同的干细胞

群,或者我们可以同时使用我们可以

使用实际的生物材料和

细胞 d 这就是今天的领域

,但它实际上并不是一个新领域

缝合血管

今天使用的一些血管移植物实际上是由亚历克西斯设计的,

但我想让你注意他的

合著者查尔斯·林德伯格,

他的余生实际上是

在洛克菲勒研究所与亚历克西斯一起工作的查尔斯·林德伯格 在

纽约的器官培养领域,

所以这个领域已经存在了这么

久,为什么会有如此领域的临床进展,

这确实与许多不同的

挑战有关,但如果我要指出

三个挑战,第一个

实际上是设计

可以进入您体内并随着时间的推移而表现良好的材料

以及许多进步现在我们可以

相当容易地做到这一点第二个挑战

我们无法获得的细胞 在过去的 20 年里,

你的细胞没有足够的细胞在体外生长,

我们基本上已经解决了许多

科学家现在可以培养许多不同

类型的细胞,而且我们有干细胞,

但即使是现在,2011 年仍有某些

细胞我们可以 从

患者的肝细胞中生长 神经细胞

即使在今天,胰腺细胞仍然可以生长它们 第三个挑战是

血管性 真正的血液供应,

使这些器官或组织

在我们再生后能够存活,因此我们

现在可以实际使用生物材料

这实际上是生物材料 我们可以编织

它们 编织它们 或者我们可以让它们像

你看到的那样 这实际上就像一个

棉花糖机 你看到这种喷雾

进入 就像棉花糖的纤维

创造这个结构

这个管状眼睛结构 这是一种

生物材料 然后,我们可以

使用您自己的细胞来帮助您的身体再生

,这正是

我们在这里所做的,因为它实际上是一个

病人 用一个死去的

器官,然后我们创造了其中一种

智能生物材料,然后我们使用这种

智能炸弹材料来替换和

修复患者的结构我们

所做的是我们实际上使用生物材料

作为桥梁,以便器官中的细胞

可以行走 在那座桥上,如果

您愿意并帮助弥合差距以

再生该组织,并且您

现在在六个月后看到那个病人,用

X 射线显示再生的组织

,当您

在显微镜下分析它时完全再生,我们

也可以使用 单独的细胞 这些实际上

是我们获得的细胞 这些是

我们从特定来源创建的干细胞

这些是我们可以将它们驱动

到化学心脏细胞中,它们开始

在培养中跳动,因此它们知道要做什么 从基因上讲,它们

知道要做什么

今天开始一起跳动

许多临床试验,使用

不同种类的干细胞治疗心脏病,

所以现在实际上是在

患者身上,或者如果我们要使用更大的

结构 ures 来替换更大的结构

,然后我们可以使用患者自己的细胞

或一些细胞群和

生物材料一起使用支架

所以这里的概念是,如果您确实有一个

或受伤的器官,我们会取一

小块该组织听一半

大小 一张邮票

然后我们将细胞分开

我们在体外培养细胞 然后拿

一个支架 生物材料

再次看起来很像

你的衬衫或衬衫

然后我们塑造这种材料 然后我们

使用这些细胞来编码 一次材料

一层,非常像

烤层蛋糕,如果你愿意的话,我们然后

将它放在一个类似烤箱的设备中,

我们能够创建这种结构

并将其取出这实际上是

我们设计的硬阀,并且 你

可以在这里看到我们有

心脏瓣膜的结构,我们已经

用细胞固定它,然后我们锻炼你,

这样你就可以看到目前正在使用的心脏瓣膜的小叶打开和

关闭。

为了进一步研究

我们在患者身上使用的另一种技术

实际上涉及膀胱我们

实际上

从患者身上取出一小块小于

邮票一半大小的膀胱

然后我们在体外培养细胞

取支架 用细胞涂在支架上

病人自己的细胞 两种

不同的细胞类型 然后我们把它放在

这个类似烤箱的设备中 具有与

人体相同的条件 37

摄氏度 95% 氧气 几周后

你就有了你的工程器官

然后我们能够

为这些特定的患者植入回患者体内我们

实际上只是缝合这些材料我们

使用 3D 成像分析

但我们实际上是手工创建了这些

生物材料但我们现在有

更好的方法来

用我们的细胞创建这些结构 现在使用某些类型的

技术,首先是实体器官

,例如肝脏

丢弃不

使用,这样我们就可以取出这些不会使用的肝脏

结构,

然后我们将它们放入洗衣机中

,这样可以

在两周后将细胞洗掉

你有一些看起来

像肝脏的东西 你 可以像肝脏一样容纳它,

但它没有细胞,它只是

肝脏的骨架,然后我们可以 Reaper

将肝脏与保留

血管树的细胞融合,因此我们实际上

首先用

患者自己的血管细胞填充血管树,然后

然后

,我们用肝细胞浸润实质,我们无法

仅仅在过去一个月使用这项

技术展示人类肝组织的形成 我们使用的另一种技术

实际上是打印技术

这实际上是一台桌面喷墨打印机,但是

我们使用的是单元而不是墨水

,您实际上可以在这里看到

打印头正在通过并打印

此结构,打印此结构和打印需要大约 40

分钟

re 是一个 3D 电梯,

每次打印头通过时,它实际上一次下降一层,最后

你可以取出那个结构,

你可以把这个结构从

打印机中弹出并植入它,这

实际上是一块 我将

在这张幻灯片中向您展示的骨头,它

实际上是用这台桌面

打印机创建并植入的,正如您在这里

看到的那样,这是使用这些技术植入的全新骨头

我们现在正在研究的另一种更先进的技术

我们的下一个 一代

技术是更复杂的

打印机 这台

值得签名的特殊打印机实际上是 1 我们

直接在患者身上打印所以你

在这里看到的是我知道这听起来很有趣,但

它就是这样工作的,因为

实际上你想做的是你

实际上想让病人

带着伤口躺在床上,而你有一台

扫描仪,基本上就像一个平板扫描仪一样的悬崖

,这就是你在

右侧看到的,你看到的是扫描仪技术

y 首先扫描

患者身上的伤口,然后返回

打印结果,实际

在患者身上打印您需要的层

这就是它的实际工作方式

这是一个扫描仪在

扫描伤口

后扫描伤口,分层发送信息

正确的细胞层,

它们需要在哪里,现在你将在

这里看到一个演示,这实际上

在一个有代表性的伤口中完成的,我们

实际上是用凝胶做的,这样你就可以

提起凝胶材料,这样一旦这些

细胞 在病人身上,他们会

坚持他们需要的地方,这

实际上是仍在

开发中的新技术,我们也在研究更

复杂的打印机,因为

实际上我们最大的挑战是

实体器官我不知道你是否意识到

这一点,但是 90% 的患者

和移植名单实际上都在

等待肾脏患者每天都在死去,

因为我们没有足够

的这些器官来运转,所以我 s

更具挑战性的大器官 血管

大量血管供应大量

细胞,所以这里的策略是

这实际上是 CT 扫描和 X 射线,

我们使用计算机

形态计量成像分析和 3D

重建逐层进行下去 对于

这些患者自己的肾脏,我们

能够对那些进行 360 度旋转的人进行实际成像,

以实际

分析肾脏的完整体积

特征,然后我们能够

实际获取这些信息,然后

以打印的计算机

形式对其进行扫描,所以我们去 逐层通过

器官分析每一层,当我们

通过器官时,我们就可以

通过计算机发送您在此处看到的信息,

并实际

为患者设计器官,这实际上

显示了实际的打印机,这

实际上表明 打印

事实上我们这里有打印机所以

我在我们今天讨论的时候

我们实际上你可以看到

打印机 bac k 在后台

,这实际上是真正的

打印机,它一直在打印

你在这里看到的肾脏结构,

打印肾脏大约需要七个小时,

现在大约需要三个小时

,博士。 康现在要上台

了,我们实际上

要给你看一个我们

今天早些时候打印的肾脏

在这里放一副手套

谢谢

你倒退了,

所以这些衣服

对我来说有点小 但是在这里,您实际上可以

看到今天早些时候打印的肾脏,这与它

有点一致,

这是博士。 康妮

在这个项目中与我们一起工作,我们

成为了我们团队的一员,谢谢博士。 卡恩

对此表示赞赏,所以这实际上是

新一代打印机,这实际上

是您在舞台上看到的打印机,这

实际上是我们现在正在研究的新技术

实际上,您知道我们

现在在这方面拥有悠久的历史,

我是 将与您分享一段

关于我们现在已经在患者身上使用的技术方面的剪辑

,这

实际上是一个非常简短的剪辑,只有大约 30

秒的患者实际

接受了一个器官 我真的病了 我

几乎无法离开 床上的我

错过了学校,这

非常痛苦 基本上是

一生的透析,我什

至不喜欢考虑如果我这样做我的生活

会是什么样子,所以在手术后我的

生活变得更好了,

我能够做更多我能够

摔跤的事情 高中我成为了

队长a队 那

太好了

卢克

上来的

时候真的很酷,所以请在昨晚之前看看

你最后一次见到托尼是什么时候十年前

我做手术的时候见到他真的

很棒

我告诉我们一些关于你的情况

现在做得很好 我在

康涅狄格大学上大学 我是

大二学生,学习通信电视

和大众媒体,基本上试图

像一个正常的孩子一样生活,我

一直想长大,但

很难做到这一点 我出生时患有脊柱

裂,我的肾脏和

膀胱无法正常工作我经历了大约 16

次手术,当我 10 岁的时候肾功能衰竭时,这似乎是不可能的,

而这次手术来了,

基本上让我成为了我 - 救了

我的命

我是托尼杜 我从他那里知道了数百个,

他在他的实验室里非常努力地工作

,并想出了一些疯狂的

东西 那时我还是个小孩子

,我还想我会

做手术 我想做的就是变得

更好,直到现在我长大了,我才意识到这有多神奇

看看他在做什么了不起的事情,

当你知道你突然接到这个电话

时,我的意思是

托尼真的很害羞,花了很多

说服力让像托尼这样谦虚的人

允许我们带卢克,所以看

你去你的 传播学教授

你主修传播学,你请求

他们允许来泰德,这

可能与传播学有一点关系,

他们的反应是什么

我的大多数教授都赞成

,他们说带图片

,你知道给我看 在线剪辑

,我很高兴你有一个

这对夫妇有点固执,但我不得不

和我谈谈我把他拉到一边很

荣幸见到你非常感谢你