| Literature DB >> 23193481 |
Isabelle Vidal1, Lysiane Richert.
Abstract
We aimed at reviewing the various uses of Nude mouse for the development of liver deficiency models and evaluation of efficacy of hepatic cell xenotransplantation. The first part records the large range of liver deficiency models that can be developed in Nude mice: surgical partial hepatectomy, acute toxic liver deficiency, chronic cirrhosis, and transgenic liver injury. The second part tackles the outcome of rat hepatocyte as well as human cell transplantation, both mature hepatocyte and hepatic progenitor, into Nude mouse submitted to liver injury. Results are discussed and compared to other available immunodeficient mouse models. The issue of humanized liver creation is also addressed. Altogether, these results show that Nude mouse appears to be a suitable small animal model to expand our insight into liver cell engraftment and regeneration.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23193481 PMCID: PMC3502033 DOI: 10.1155/2012/140147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hepatol
Literature review of xenogenic liver cell transplantation in immunodeficient mouse models.
| Reference | Year | Recipient animal | Induced liver deficiency model | Transplanted cells | Duration of the study | Engraftment efficiency (%) and outcome | Precised mouse type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Vidal et al. [ | 2008 | Nude mice | Jo2 250 | Sprague-Dawley | 3 weeks | 4.2% | Balb/c Nude mice |
|
Rhim et al. [ | 1995 | uPA-Nude mice | uPA | Sprague-Dawley | 8 weeks | Reach 100% | uPA mice crossed with Swiss athymic nude (nu/nu) mice |
|
Mahieu-Caputo et al. [ | 2004 | Nude mice | PHx 50% | Human fetal hepatoblast (11–13 WG) | 6 weeks | 0.05 to 5% | Athymic mice |
|
Nowak et al. [ | 2005 | Nude mice | GalN IP 0.7 g/kg 36 h prior to transplantation | CD117+/CD34+/Lin-human fetal liver cell (6–10 WG) | 4 weeks | 4-5% | C57 Black/nude mice |
|
Joshi et al. [ | 2012 | Nude mice | Retrorsine 70 mg/kg and PHx 30% | Human fetal hepatocyte/liver mesenchymal cell | 4 weeks | 12% | C57BL/6 nude mice |
|
Woo et al. [ | 2012 | Nude mice | CCl4 10 | Hepatocyte-like cells derived from human embryonic stem cell (iPS) | 5 weeks | 20–23% | Balb/c nude mice |
|
Banas et al. [ | 2009 | Nude mice | CCl4 10 | Adipose-derived stem cells derived hepatocyte-like cells | One day |
? | Balb/c nude mice |
|
Jiang et al. [ | 2010 | SCID beige mice | Jo2 0.2 mg/kg weekly | Human HepaRG cell line | 10 weeks | 15–20% | SCID beige mice |
|
Su et al. [ | 2011 | Fah−/−Nod/SCID mice and FK506 treatment | Fah | Human hepatocyte | 6 weeks | 0.6–18% | Fah−/−Nod/SCID mice |
|
Azuma et al. [ | 2007 | Fah−/−/Rag2−/−/Il2Rg−/− mice | uPA adenovirus transfert | Human hepatocyte | 8 to 12 weeks | >1% for 17/73 mice | Fah/Rag2/Il2rg triple |
|
Dandri et al. [ | 2001 | uPA/Rag2−/− mice | uPA | Human hepatocyte | 4 weeks | 2–10% | uPA/Rag2−/− mice |
|
Haridass et al. [ | 2009 | uPA+/−/rag2−/−/ | uPA | Mouse and human hepatocyte and fetal liver cell | 3 months | Mouse hepatocyte 46% | uPA+/−/rag2−/−/ |
|
Hasegawa et al. [ | 2011 | TK-NOG mice | Ganciclovir | Human hepatocyte | Up to 8 months | 43% | Nonobese diabetic/SCID/IL2R |
|
Douglas et al. [ | 2010 | vTK-SCID/uPA | Hepatic failure induced by Gancyclovir (for hepatocyte bearing HSVtk plasmide) | Human hepatocyte | 8 weeks | No survival of mice | SCID/uPA mice |
WG: weeks of gestation, PHx: partial hepatectomy, GalN: Galactosamine, uPA: uroplasminogen activator, Fah: fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase, MSC: mesenchymal stem cells, and CCl4: carbon tetrachloride.
Figure 1Nude mouse liver histology after hematoxylin and eosin staining, in mouse control (a) and after a single Jo2 injection of 125 μg/kg (b), 250 μg/kg (c), 375 μg/kg (d), and 500 μg/kg (e). Photomicrographs were taken using Olympus DP70 microscope with an original magnification of 100x. Black and blue arrows indicate apoptotic foci and necrotic foci, respectively.
Figure 2Liver histology after trichrome staining of Nude mice 5 weeks (a) and 14 weeks after the beginning of the thioacetamide cirrhogenic treatment and 5 months after the end of the 14-week-long treatment (c). Black arrows indicate fibrous extension. Photomicrographs were taken using Olympus DP70 microscope with an original magnification of 40x.
Figure 3Immunodetection of engrafted rat hepatocytes in Nude mouse liver (original magnification ×40), 21 days after cell transplantation, treated weekly with repeated doses of Jo2 (250 μg/kg). Blue: Nuclei staining (Hoechst 33342), green: positive CMH class I signal, white arrow: rat hepatocyte.