(Press-News.org) Reconnecting Kidney Plumbing, the Zebrafish Way
MDI Bio Lab scientists discover how the fish solves a basic challenge in regenerative biology—insights in their newest publication in the journal Development could one day guide human repair.
When the human kidney is damaged by conditions such as high blood pressure or the elevated blood sugar levels that accompany diabetes, it can lose some of its nephrons – the kidney’s basic waste-filtering units.
Lose enough of them and kidney function falters, leading to the hallmarks of chronic kidney disease: fatigue, swelling, shortness of breath. It’s the ninth leading cause of death in the world.
And in adult humans, once a nephron is gone, it’s gone. There is no way to grow it back.
At least, not yet.
Scientists at MDI Bio Lab and around the world are attacking the problem from many angles; growing new kidney tissue and mini-organs called “organoids” from human stem cells, using 3D “bioprinting” to build a new kidney from scratch, or coaxing the body to repair and regenerate its own nephrons and kidneys, the way some other animals do.
Such as the zebrafish.
A Fish That Can Replace What We Cannot
Unlike humans, adult zebrafish can form entirely new nephrons after kidney injury. Even more remarkable, those new filtration units don’t simply grow; they connect themselves to a network of microscopic pipes (called tubules) that flow fluid through the kidneys, retaining water, electrolytes and nutrients while shunting waste products into the urinary system.
Scientists have had some success generating kidney tissue in the lab, and even grafting it into mammals such as mice. But getting a kidney organoid to hook into the tubule network and actually perform its filtering functions? Not so easy.
“It’s a plumbing problem,” says Iain Drummond, Ph.D., Scientific Director of MDI Bio Lab’s Kathryn W. Davis Center for Regenerative Biology and Aging.
“It’s one thing to grow kidney tissue in a Petri dish,” he continues. “It’s another to integrate that tissue into a working organ — to link new plumbing into old pipes and send fluid through without leaks, or blockages, or wrong turns.”
Connecting New Pipes to Old
Drummond, MDI Bio Lab Senior Research Scientist Caramai Kamei, Ph.D., and their colleagues set out to discover how zebrafish solve the problem.
“We knew new nephrons were forming,” Kamei explains. “But nobody had looked closely at how they physically hook up to the existing tubule.”
What the team discovered was a highly coordinated cellular choreography: At the precise point where a newly forming zebrafish nephron meets an older kidney tubule, a small group of cells briefly changes its behavior.
Instead of remaining in compact rows, these cells extend protrusions into the neighboring tissue, helping initiate the connection between old and new structures.(The MDI team and research collaborators are the first to fully describe these protrusions and their function).
Just one cell’s distance away, other cells are doing something entirely different, dividing and contributing to the growth of the newly forming tubule. Farther from the connection site, cells begin differentiating into the structures needed for filtration. Side by side, one population invades and connects, while another builds and specializes.
“It’s one cell apart,” Kamei says. “One cell is doing one thing, and the next is doing something different.”
Guiding the Connection
The study found that this plumbing process is governed by intersecting signaling systems, including a well-studied protein cascade deployed in many species, including humans, called the “canonical” Wnt pathway.
The researchers also found a second branch of the Wnt messaging system that depends on a cell-surface “switch” called fzd9b that helps cells orient the connection so that the new unit links up in the right place and direction.
Together, these molecular cues tell cells when to grow, when to change shape, and when to stop dividing and focus on integration, while guiding where the connection forms. If all goes well the result is a functional, open junction between old and new, an integrated filtering unit that can drain into the kidney’s plumbing system.
It Has to Work
Drummond believes the importance of the zebrafish’s reconnection technique reaches well beyond the kidney. That’s because in regenerative medicine, growing a wide variety of tissue types in a laboratory is no longer the central obstacle; engrafting that tissue inside a living system and having it actually work remains the greater challenge, and a potential bottleneck for the field’s development.
“At some point,” Drummond says, “you don’t just want tissue sitting there. It has to do something. The plumbing has to go somewhere.”
From a basic biological point of view, many researchers also believe that the onset of function helps drive final maturation of a new organ and may be required for true success. “The moment that fluid starts flowing through a tube or blood begins circulating through new vessels, cells respond,” Drummond says. “They change. They stabilize.”
Without that final step, lab-grown tissues may resemble organs structurally, but still never achieve the durability and functionality of the real thing, he says. If scientists can learn from the zebrafish how to guide new, human kidney tissue or other engineered organs to integrate and begin functioning in the body, the implications extend across regenerative biology.
“That’s the final step that’s missing with a lot of these lab-grown, tissue-based organs,” Drummond says. “We have our eyes open for that, and I’m hopeful we’ll have an impact on making stem-cell–derived tissues not just structurally correct, but functionally useful.”
That shift — from constructing tissue to restoring performance — represents one of the central challenges of regenerative medicine today.
END
Reconnecting kidney plumbing, the zebrafish way
MDI Bio Lab scientists discover how the fish solves a basic challenge in regenerative biology
2026-03-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Biologically inspired event camera for accurate passive vibration measurement
2026-03-17
Tsukuba, Japan—Noncontact vibration measurement is essential for ensuring the safety and reliability of structures such as buildings, bridges, aircraft, and railway systems. Laser-based systems such as laser Doppler violometers provide accurate results but require expensive equipment and elaborate setup procedures. Camera-based vibration measurement has gained attention as a more affordable alternative. However, conventional cameras generate images by integrating light over a finite exposure time. To capture high-speed vibrations, the exposure time must be shortened, which reduces the amount of detectable light. Accordingly, the illumination must be significantly increased, ...
Single-cell transcriptomic analysis of the terminal ileum identifies BCMA as a therapeutic target in IgA nephropathy
2026-03-17
IgA nephropathy (IgAN) is the most common primary glomerulonephritis worldwide. For decades, the “gut-kidney axis” hypothesis has suggested that the disease begins not in the kidneys, but in the gut mucosa, where an abnormal immune response produces pathogenic galactose-deficient IgA1 (Gd–IgA1). However, current treatments mostly focus on suppressing inflammation in the kidney, failing to stop the production of harmful antibodies at their source. The precise cellular mechanisms within the gut of IgAN patients have remained a black box due to the challenges of obtaining and analyzing intestinal tissue.
In ...
Muscle-healing 'Ally' turns 'Enemy': A novel immune cell subset that controls muscle regeneration and ossification in FOP
2026-03-17
We have identified a macrophage population “Mrep” that plays an essential role in muscle repair. However, in Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP), Mrep functions as a pathogenic cell that triggers heterotopic ossification. These research findings would contribute not only to muscle regeneration therapy but also to the development of novel therapeutic approaches for FOP.
Musculoskeletal disorders are a primary cause of disability worldwide, especially in aging societies like Japan. As individuals age, reductions in muscle mass ...
Waterpipe smoking can cause carbon monoxide poisoning even after brief use, during outdoor smoking, or through indoor secondhand exposure
2026-03-17
Tsukuba, Japan—Waterpipe tobacco smoking—also known as shisha, hookah, or narghile—is a method in which tobacco is heated with charcoal and the resulting smoke passes through water before being inhaled. Although the practice originated in the Middle East during the late Middle Ages, it poses a significant risk of carbon monoxide exposure because the charcoal used for heating produces CO through incomplete combustion. Within the jurisdiction of Tokyo's Third Fire District Headquarters, which covers three southwestern wards of Tokyo, emergency services recorded approximately one case of acute CO poisoning related to waterpipe ...
Impact of Japan's indoor smoke-free laws on the prevalence of smoke-free establishments
2026-03-17
Tsukuba, Japan—To reduce the adverse health effects associated with exposure to second-hand smoke, Japan fully enforced the Revised Health Promotion Law in April 2020, introducing a nationwide indoor smoking ban in restaurants and similar hospitality establishments. However, the law includes temporary exemptions that permit pre-existing small-scale restaurants and bars to allow indoor smoking, provided that individuals under the age of 20 are not exposed.
To mitigate the potential public health impact of these exemptions, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government and Chiba City simultaneously implemented stricter passive smoking prevention ordinances designed to further ...
New study fills research gap in food safety to better protect pregnant people from Listeria
2026-03-17
Herdon, VA, March 17, 2026 — Listeria is the third-leading cause of death among bacterial foodborne pathogens in the U.S. and pregnant individuals bear a disproportionate share of that burden. Yet the scientific models used to set food safety policy have rarely been designed with pregnant people specifically in mind. A new study to be published in Risk Analysis aims to change that.
Each year, approximately 1,250 Americans contract listeriosis, the illness caused by Listeria monocytogenes. The disease carries a staggering 86% hospitalization rate and is fatal in approximately 14% of cases. For pregnant individuals, the stakes are even higher: ...
PFAS exposure may weaken teens’ bones
2026-03-17
WASHINGTON—Early-life exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) may influence how children’s bones develop during adolescence, according to new research published in the Journal of the Endocrine Society.
PFAS are synthetic chemicals found in water, food and everyday products. These “forever chemicals,” many of which persist in the environment and in the human body, may interfere with normal development, including ...
Researchers develop promising new therapy for most common form of bone cancer in children and young adults
2026-03-17
CLEVELAND—Finding an effective treatment for osteosarcoma, the most common type of bone cancer in children and young adults, has puzzled medical researchers for 40 years.
Now, a new study by researchers at Case Western Reserve University and University Hospitals show some promising results.
The study, published in BMC Medicine, found that a specially engineered immune-cell treatment, called OSM CAR-T, successfully attacks osteosarcoma tumors in mouse models.
Osteosarcoma mainly strikes children, teenagers and young adults ...
FAU-FWC Study: Endangered smalltooth sawfish make a comeback in a historical Florida nursery
2026-03-17
During the winters of 2024 and 2025, widespread “spinning fish” events swept through the Florida Keys, impacting more than 80 marine fish species and likely killing hundreds of endangered large juvenile and adult smalltooth sawfish (Pristis pectinata). This mysterious phenomenon caused fish to swim in tight circles, lose balance and sometimes die, likely due to environmental stressors or neurotoxins from algae.
These losses dealt a major blow to a species that has already suffered one of the most severe ...
Towards highly efficient selective hydrogenation: the role of single-atom catalysts
2026-03-17
Selective hydrogenation is a key reaction in the chemical industry, playing an essential role in petrochemical refining, fine chemical synthesis, pharmaceutical manufacturing, and environmental applications. The ability to precisely control hydrogenation selectivity is particularly critical for reactions involving multifunctional molecules, where over-hydrogenation or undesired side reactions can significantly reduce product value. In recent years, single-atom catalysts (SACs) have emerged as a promising class of catalytic materials capable of addressing these challenges. A recent review provides a systematic ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Qubits created using unexpected materials
Superconductor advance could unlock ultra-energy-efficient electronics
Closing your eyes might not help you hear better after all
New computational biology tool automates and standardizes genome sequencing analysis
Climate change is fueling disease outbreaks
Three anesthesia drugs all have the same effect in the brain, MIT researchers find
Violence against women who inject drugs
Math can tell you how to manage your eczema
Adherence to healthy lifestyle and risk of cardiometabolic diseases in individuals with hypertension
Past intensive whaling threatens the future of bowhead whales
Thoughts don’t kill people, but study suggests options for keeping guns from doing so
Historian Lyndal Roper named 2026 Holberg Prize Laureate
Reconnecting kidney plumbing, the zebrafish way
Biologically inspired event camera for accurate passive vibration measurement
Single-cell transcriptomic analysis of the terminal ileum identifies BCMA as a therapeutic target in IgA nephropathy
Muscle-healing 'Ally' turns 'Enemy': A novel immune cell subset that controls muscle regeneration and ossification in FOP
Waterpipe smoking can cause carbon monoxide poisoning even after brief use, during outdoor smoking, or through indoor secondhand exposure
Impact of Japan's indoor smoke-free laws on the prevalence of smoke-free establishments
New study fills research gap in food safety to better protect pregnant people from Listeria
PFAS exposure may weaken teens’ bones
Researchers develop promising new therapy for most common form of bone cancer in children and young adults
FAU-FWC Study: Endangered smalltooth sawfish make a comeback in a historical Florida nursery
Towards highly efficient selective hydrogenation: the role of single-atom catalysts
A theory of Alzheimer's disease linking amyloid beta and tau
Ultra-processed foods linked with serious heart problems
Routine blood pressure readings offer early insights on dementia risk
Shingles vaccine drastically cuts risk of serious cardiac events
A new bird species in Japan
Divisive political rhetoric and the pursuit of celebrity by politicians
The adoption of the bow and arrow in western North America
[Press-News.org] Reconnecting kidney plumbing, the zebrafish wayMDI Bio Lab scientists discover how the fish solves a basic challenge in regenerative biology