We noted you are experiencing viewing problems
-
Check with your IT department that JWPlatform, JWPlayer and Amazon AWS & CloudFront are not being blocked by your network. The relevant domains are *.jwplatform.com, *.jwpsrv.com, *.jwpcdn.com, jwpltx.com, jwpsrv.a.ssl.fastly.net, *.amazonaws.com and *.cloudfront.net. The relevant ports are 80 and 443.
-
Check the following talk links to see which ones work correctly:
Auto Mode
HTTP Progressive Download Send us your results from the above test links at access@hstalks.com and we will contact you with further advice on troubleshooting your viewing problems. -
No luck yet? More tips for troubleshooting viewing issues
-
Contact HST Support access@hstalks.com
-
Please review our troubleshooting guide for tips and advice on resolving your viewing problems.
-
For additional help, please don't hesitate to contact HST support access@hstalks.com
We hope you have enjoyed this limited-length demo
This is a limited length demo talk; you may
login or
review methods of
obtaining more access.
- Cancer and Oncology
-
3. Latest advances in the development of CAR & TCR T-cell treatments for solid tumours
- Dr. Else Marit Inderberg
-
4. Mode of action of T cells engineered with CAR or TCR for cancer treatment
- Prof. Sebastian Kobold
-
5. Immunotherapy: insights from advanced disease
- Dr. Sara M. Tolaney
-
6. Recent advances in the field of non-coding RNAs in cancer
- Prof. George Calin
- Dr. Maitri Shah
-
7. How tumor-microenvironment interactions drive or inhibit metastasis
- Prof. Isaac P. Witz
-
8. A novel cancer therapy to stimulate oncogenic ERK signalling
- Prof. Reiko Sugiura
-
9. MRD-driven multiple myeloma treatment: next step forward
- Prof. Ola Landgren
-
11. Germinal centre lymphomas: advances in diagnostic and therapeutic intervention
- Dr. Koorosh Korfi
- Prof. Jude Fitzgibbon
-
12. Immunotherapy in lung cancer
- Dr. Mark M. Awad
-
13. Preservation of fertility in cancer patients: the impact of chemotherapy
- Prof. Kutluk H. Oktay
-
15. Solution proposed to a 2000 year old problem in oncology
- Dr. Michael Retsky
- Clinical Practice
-
16. Stillbirth: diagnosis, investigation and aftercare
- Prof. Alexander E. P. Heazell
-
17. Analyzing the medical relevance of skin care trends
- Prof. Zoe Draelos
-
18. Genetic counseling: preconception, prenatal, perinatal
- Prof. Aubrey Milunsky
-
19. The past, present & future of ANA testing: history and challenges of ANA
- Prof. Marvin J. Fritzler
-
20. The past, present & future of ANA testing: changing bandwidth and future of ANA
- Prof. Marvin J. Fritzler
-
22. Mitochondrial diseases: an update
- Dr. Ayesha Saleem
-
23. Hemophilia A
- Dr. Snejana Krassova
-
26. Recent advances in diagnosis and interventions in ophthalmology
- Dr. Rebecca Kaye
- Prof. Andrew Lotery
- Gastroenterology
-
27. Building implantable human liver tissue from pluripotent stem cells
- Prof. David C. Hay
-
28. Microbiome therapies to treat gastrointestinal diseases
- Dr. Patricia Bloom
-
29. Drug-induced liver injury: importance, epidemiology, and mechanisms of DILI
- Prof. James H. Lewis
-
30. Drug-induced liver injury: risk factors and drug development in DILI
- Prof. James H. Lewis
-
31. Drug-induced liver injury: HDS, diagnosing, treating and preventing DILI
- Prof. James H. Lewis
-
32. An update on the multiple faces of celiac disease
- Prof. Aaron Lerner
- Immunology
-
33. Rac-enhanced CAR immunotherapy: RaceCAR
- Prof. Denise Montell
-
34. Enhancing innate anti-tumour immunity: lessons from virotherapy and STING agonism 1
- Prof. Kevin Harrington
-
35. Enhancing innate anti-tumour immunity: lessons from virotherapy and STING agonism 2
- Prof. Kevin Harrington
-
36. Drug allergy: new knowledge
- Prof. Mariana C. Castells
-
37. Biologics as a treatment strategy in food allergy
- Prof. Sayantani B. Sindher
-
38. B cells at the crossroads of autoimmune diseases
- Dr. Xiang Lin
-
39. Studying immune responses “one cell at a time”
- Dr. Mir-Farzin Mashreghi
-
40. Mathematical modeling in immunology
- Prof. Ruy M. Ribeiro
-
41. Therapeutic antibody development
- Prof. Dr. Katja Hanack
-
42. Understanding treatment coverage in mass drug administrations
- Dr. Margaret Baker
-
43. The thymus and T cell development: a primer
- Prof. Georg Holländer
- Infectious Diseases
-
45. The Global Virus Network: collaboration to address pandemic and regional threats
- Prof. Sten H. Vermund
-
46. New concepts in the management of CAP: a focus on severe illness - treatment and therapies
- Prof. Michael S. Niederman
-
47. New concepts in the management of CAP: a focus on severe illness - MRSA and MDR pathogens
- Prof. Michael S. Niederman
-
48. CRISPR-based suppression drives for vector control
- Prof. Andrea Crisanti
-
49. HIV cure: harnessing innate and adaptive strategies
- Prof. Luis Montaner
- Cardiovascular, Metabolism & Nutrition
-
50. Cow’s milk allergy: the future
- Dr. Carina Venter
-
51. Cow's milk allergy: management
- Dr. Carina Venter
-
52. Moving from GWAS hits to functional variants
- Prof. Steve Humphries
-
53. X-linked hypophosphataemia: genetics, diagnosis and management
- Prof. Thomas O. Carpenter
-
54. What is new in type 1 diabetes?
- Prof. Åke Lernmark
-
55. Current concepts for the management of patients with osteoporosis
- Dr. Michael Lewiecki
-
56. Antibodies to control or prevent type 1 diabetes
- Dr. Robert Hilbrands
-
57. Peptide YY (PYY) in obesity and diabetes
- Dr. Nigel Irwin
- Microbiology
-
58. Vaccines and the fight against antimicrobial resistance 1
- Dr. Annaliesa S. Anderson
-
59. Vaccines and the fight against antimicrobial resistance 2
- Dr. Annaliesa S. Anderson
-
60. Vaccines as a weapon against antibiotic resistance
- Dr. Pumtiwitt McCarthy
-
61. PathoLive: pathogen detection while sequencing
- Dr. Simon Tausch
-
63. Successes and failures with vaccines
- Prof. Stanley Plotkin
-
64. Immunology, the microbiome and future perspectives
- Prof. Sheena Cruickshank
-
65. Impact of the HPV vaccine programme – a changing landscape
- Dr. Kevin Pollock
- Neurology and Neuroscience
-
66. Advances in the diagnosis and treatment of tardive dyskinesia
- Prof. Emeritus Stanley N. Caroff
-
67. Cellular therapies for neurological Injuries: bioreactors, potency, and coagulation
- Prof. Charles S. Cox, Jr.
-
68. Cardiovascular involvement in Parkinson’s disease
- Dr. David S. Goldstein
-
69. Molecular brain imaging (PET) in diseases with dementia
- Prof. Karl Herholz
-
70. Current thinking in pain medicine and some thoughts on back pain
- Dr. Nick Hacking
-
71. Bioelectronic medicine: immunomodulation by vagus nerve stimulation
- Prof. Paul Peter Tak
-
72. Developments & future directions in the management of chronic pain
- Prof. Simon Haroutounian
-
73. Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) neuromodulation for Schizophrenia
- Prof. Judith Gault
-
74. Parkinson’s at 200 years: an update on Parkinson’s research in 2017
- Prof. Patrick A. Lewis
-
75. Alzheimer's disease: where are we up to?
- Prof. John Hardy
- Pharmaceutical Sciences
-
76. Pharmacokinetics, -dynamics and dosing considerations in children
- Prof. Dr. Karel Allegaert
-
77. Why in vitro permeation test – and not in vivo?
- Prof. Howard Maibach
-
78. The future of plasma-derived medicinal products (PDMP)
- Dr. Daniele Focosi
-
79. RNA therapeutics: clinical applications and methods of delivery
- Prof. John P. Cooke
-
80. Recent advances in the development of gene delivery technologies
- Dr. Takis Athanasopoulos
-
81. Preclinical translation of mesenchymal stem cell therapies
- Dr. Peter Childs
-
82. Modulating gene expression to treat diseases
- Dr. Navneet Matharu
-
83. Accelerating drug discovery with machine learning and AI
- Dr. Olexandr Isayev
-
84. AI and big data in drug discovery
- Mr. Ed Addison
-
85. Emerging big data in medicinal chemistry: promiscuity analysis as an example
- Prof. Dr. Jürgen Bajorath
- Dr. Ye Hu
-
86. Binding kinetics in drug discovery
- Dr. Rumin Zhang
-
87. Modeling of antibody-drug conjugate pharmacokinetics
- Dr. Dhaval K. Shah
-
88. Antibody engineering: beginnings to bispecifics and beyond
- Dr. Ian Wilkinson
-
89. Current challenges in the design of antibody-drug conjugates
- Prof. L. Nathan Tumey
-
90. Inorganic nanostructured interfaces for therapeutic delivery
- Prof. Tejal Desai
-
91. Latest development in therapy-related autophagy research
- Dr. Vignir Helgason
- Respiratory Diseases
-
92. Respiratory syncytial virus vaccination
- Prof. Peter Openshaw
-
93. Advances in gene therapy for respiratory diseases 1
- Prof. John F. Engelhardt
-
94. Advances in gene therapy for respiratory diseases 2
- Prof. John F. Engelhardt
-
95. Asthma
- Prof. William Busse
- Dr. Amanda McIntyre
-
96. New drugs for asthma
- Prof. Peter Barnes
-
97. CompEx asthma: a novel composite exacerbation endpoint
- Dr. Carla A. Da Silva
-
98. Updates in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
- Dr. Omar S. Usmani
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Disclosure (1)
- Disclosure (2)
- The liver
- Liver disease
- Current approaches
- Grand challenges
- Pluripotent stem cells
- Chemically defined differentiation
- Efficient hepatocyte specification
- Drug metabolism and transporter expression
- Pathway analysis
- Benchmarking with industry
- Defining the ECM
- Improved function
- Improved gene expression
- Semi-automated differentiation and screening
- Metabolic dysfunction in hepatic steatosis
- Product development
- Multiple applications and disciplines
- Stemnovate
- Rapid cell dedifferentiation in 2D culture
- Three-dimensional differentiation
- Microwell differentiation
- Scalable liver sphere formation
- Stable liver phenotype in vitro
- Developing an implant – chemistry
- Developing an implant – engineering
- Scaffold loading
- Use of implant to treat metabolic liver disease
- Scaffold implantation
- Rescuing metabolic liver disease in vivo
- Hepatocyte T cell modulation
- Refining tissue engineering
- Liver sphere function
- Disease modelling – fatty liver disease
- Disease modelling – cancer cell metastasis
- Tissue engineering automation
- Stimuliver
- How it works
- Summary
- Acknowledgements
Topics Covered
- Pluripotent stem cells
- Tissue engineering
- Liver
- Hepatocyte
- In vitro modelling
- Implantable liver tissue
Links
Series:
Categories:
External Links
Talk Citation
Hay, D.C. (2023, May 31). Building implantable human liver tissue from pluripotent stem cells [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved February 5, 2025, from https://doi.org/10.69645/XQST4758.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. David C. Hay has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
A selection of talks on Cell Biology
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hi, my name is David
Hay. I'm Professor of
Tissue Engineering at the
University of Edinburgh's
Centre for
Regenerative Medicine.
Today, I'm gonna
talk about "Building
Implantable Human Liver Tissue
from Pluripotent Stem Cells".
0:16
I have a couple of disclosures
before we go any further.
I'm founder, director
and shareholder of
Stemnovate Limited
based in Cambridge, UK.
0:26
I'm also founder, CEO,
and shareholder in Stimuliver,
a company based in
Copenhagen at the
BioInnovation Institute.
0:36
Our interest is in the liver and
the liver is a highly
organised organ.
It's comprised of
four lobes. Each of
those lobes has an
organised lobule structure.
This organisation of
the lobule structure is
essential for the liver's
multifunctional capacity,
which has been estimated to have
over 500 functions within
the body and also,
this is very important for
liver regeneration when
the liver is damaged.
What we see happening
in the disease process
is the gradual breakdown
of this lobule structure.
This leads to loss
of liver function,
loss of liver regeneration, and
can lead to the onset
of liver disease.
1:19
What does liver disease
look like in the UK?
This is a growing disease and
a growing concern, where we see
some major causes of
death decrease or
stabilise over the
last 50 years,
liver disease has increased
fourfold, and this is
why I'm interested in
studying liver disease to try
and find ways to understand
the disease process
in more detail,
and to try and find ways to
reverse the disease process.
Amid model liver biology
in the dish and
more recently our
generating implantable
tissue for
liver disease patients in
the clinic in the future.