| Literature DB >> 30589181 |
Thibaud Garcin1,2, Anne-Sophie Gauthier1, Emmanuel Crouzet1, Zhiguo He1, Pascal Herbepin1, Chantal Perrache1, Sophie Acquart3, Fabrice Cognasse3, Fabien Forest1,4, Gilles Thuret1,2,5, Philippe Gain1,2.
Abstract
Optimal ex vivo corneal storage in eye banks is crucial to increase both the number of corneas suitable for graft and their intrinsic quality, mainly the number of viable endothelial cells, which dictates graft survival in recipients. With both passive storage methods used worldwide (short-term cold storage in the United States, long-term organ culture in Europe), significant endothelial cell loss is inevitable. Here we show that, with an active storage machine, also called a bioreactor, which restores 2 fundamental physiological parameters, intraocular pressure and medium renewal, endothelial cell survival is improved by 23% compared with organ culture after 4 weeks' storage. Also observed in the bioreactor is a 4-fold higher expression of Na+ /K+ ATPase, which supports one of the major endothelial cell pumping functions. In addition, corneas remain thin and transparent, so they are suitable for surgery at any time. This new active eye banking method may help to reduce the severe global scarcity of donor corneas.Entities:
Keywords: basic (laboratory) research/science; bioengineering; cellular biology; corneal transplantation/ophthalmology; immunohistochemistry; organ perfusion and preservation; tissue (nonvascularized); translational research/science; transplantation
Year: 2019 PMID: 30589181 DOI: 10.1111/ajt.15238
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Transplant ISSN: 1600-6135 Impact factor: 8.086