The number of patients requiring dialysis therapy continues to increase worldwide because of the lack of effective treatments for chronic kidney disease (CKD). Furthermore, no curative treatments for acute kidney injury (AKI) have been established. The therapeutic effects of human induced pluripotent stem cell–derived nephron progenitor cells (hiPSC-NPCs) on AKI have been reported in mice but not clinically confirmed. There are also no reports examining the therapeutic potential of hiPSC-NPCs on CKD. Although large numbers of uniform hiPSC-NPCs are required for cell therapies for AKI and CKD, effective expansion cultures remain to be developed. Here, we established a culture medium for cells that enabled more than 100-fold proliferation of hiPSC-NPCs from multiple hiPSC lines in two passages. We demonstrated that hiPSC-NPCs expanded by our medium named CFY or by their conditioned medium alone attenuated kidney injury and improved survival in cisplatin-induced AKI mice. We also observed that hiPSC-NPCs prevented kidney functional decline, interstitial fibrosis, and senescence in aristolochic acid–induced CKD mice. In addition, we found c-MET to be a specific cell surface marker for hiPSC-NPCs and confirmed that purified c-MET
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hiPSC-NPCs had therapeutic effects on AKI and CKD mice. Furthermore, we found that hiPSC-NPCs exerted their therapeutic effects in AKI and CKD mice by secreting vascular endothelial growth factor A. Expanded hiPSC-NPCs may be useful cell therapies for AKI and CKD and may open avenues for treating kidney diseases.