Literature DB >> 18339772

Embryonic porcine liver as a source for transplantation: advantage of intact liver implants over isolated hepatoblasts in overcoming homeostatic inhibition by the quiescent host liver.

Helena Katchman1, Orna Tal, Smadar Eventov-Friedman, Elias Shezen, Anna Aronovich, Dalit Tchorsh, Sivan Cohen, Alexander Shtabsky, Gil Hecht, Benjamin Dekel, Enrique Freud, Yair Reisner.   

Abstract

Cell therapy as an alternative to orthotopic liver transplantation represents a major challenge, since negligible proliferation of isolated hepatocytes occurs after transplantation because of the stringent homeostatic control displayed by the host liver. Thus, different modalities of liver injury as part of the pretransplant conditioning are a prerequisite for this approach. The major objective of the present study was to test whether xenotransplantation of pig fetal liver fragments, in which potential cell-cell and cell-stroma interactions are spared, might afford more robust growth and proliferation compared with isolated pig fetal hepatoblasts. After transplantation into SCID mice, fetal liver tissue fragments exhibited marked growth and proliferation, in the setting of a quiescent host liver, compared with isolated fetal hepatoblasts harvested at the same gestational age (embryonic day 28). The proliferative advantage of fetal pig liver fragments was clearly demonstrated by immunohistochemical and morphometric assays and was observed not only after implantation into the liver but also into extrahepatic sites, such as the spleen and the subrenal capsule. The presence of all types of nonparenchymal liver cells that is crucial for normal liver development and regeneration was demonstrated in the implants. Preservation of the three-dimensional structure in pig fetal liver fragments enables autonomous proliferation of transplanted hepatic cells in the setting of a quiescent host liver, without any requirement for liver injury in the pretransplant conditioning. The marked proliferation and functional maturation exhibited by the pig fetal liver fragments suggests that it could afford a preferable source for transplantation.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18339772     DOI: 10.1634/stemcells.2007-0631

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stem Cells        ISSN: 1066-5099            Impact factor:   6.277


  8 in total

1.  Activation, isolation, identification and culture of hepatic stem cells from porcine liver tissues.

Authors:  Z He; M Feng
Journal:  Cell Prolif       Date:  2011-10-11       Impact factor: 6.831

2.  Engineering liver tissue from induced pluripotent stem cells: a first step in generating new organs for transplantation?

Authors:  Ira J Fox; Stephen A Duncan
Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  2013-10-31       Impact factor: 17.425

3.  Preconditioning allows engraftment of mouse and human embryonic lung cells, enabling lung repair in mice.

Authors:  Chava Rosen; Elias Shezen; Anna Aronovich; Yael Zlotnikov Klionsky; Yasmin Yaakov; Miri Assayag; Inbal Eti Biton; Orna Tal; Guy Shakhar; Herzel Ben-Hur; David Shneider; Zvi Vaknin; Oscar Sadan; Shmuel Evron; Enrique Freud; David Shoseyov; Michael Wilschanski; Neville Berkman; Willem E Fibbe; David Hagin; Carmit Hillel-Karniel; Irit Milman Krentsis; Esther Bachar-Lustig; Yair Reisner
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2015-07-13       Impact factor: 53.440

Review 4.  Xenotransplantation models to study the effects of toxicants on human fetal tissues.

Authors:  Daniel J Spade; Elizabeth V McDonnell; Nicholas E Heger; Jennifer A Sanders; Camelia M Saffarini; Philip A Gruppuso; Monique E De Paepe; Kim Boekelheide
Journal:  Birth Defects Res B Dev Reprod Toxicol       Date:  2014-12-04

5.  Cryo-chemical decellularization of the whole liver for mesenchymal stem cells-based functional hepatic tissue engineering.

Authors:  Wei-Cheng Jiang; Yu-Hao Cheng; Meng-Hua Yen; Yin Chang; Vincent W Yang; Oscar K Lee
Journal:  Biomaterials       Date:  2014-01-24       Impact factor: 12.479

6.  Successful auto-implantation of hepatic cells in lung tissue: An animal study.

Authors:  Gholamreza Mohajeri; Hessam Ghassemof; Mohammad Reza Mohajeri; Shahriar Adibi; Amir Hosein Davarpanah Jazi
Journal:  J Res Med Sci       Date:  2013-09       Impact factor: 1.852

7.  Embryonic porcine skin precursors can successfully develop into integrated skin without teratoma formation posttransplantation in nude mouse model.

Authors:  Zhenggen Huang; Junjie Yang; Gaoxing Luo; Chengjun Gan; Wenguang Cheng; Shunzong Yuan; Xu Peng; Jianglin Tan; Xiaojuan Wang; Jie Hu; Shiwei Yang; Yair Reisner; Liangpeng Ge; Hong Wei; Ping Cheng; Jun Wu
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-01-18       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Pig embryonic pancreatic tissue as a source for transplantation in diabetes: transient treatment with anti-LFA1, anti-CD48, and FTY720 enables long-term graft maintenance in mice with only mild ongoing immunosuppression.

Authors:  Dalit Tchorsh-Yutsis; Gil Hecht; Anna Aronovich; Elias Shezen; Yael Klionsky; Chava Rosen; Rivka Bitcover; Smadar Eventov-Friedman; Helena Katchman; Sivan Cohen; Orna Tal; Oren Milstein; Hideo Yagita; Bruce R Blazar; Yair Reisner
Journal:  Diabetes       Date:  2009-04-28       Impact factor: 9.461

  8 in total

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