| Literature DB >> 35003615 |
Jiabin Zhang1,2, Hon Fai Chan3,4, Haixia Wang1, Dan Shao5, Yu Tao1, Mingqiang Li1,2.
Abstract
Liver failure is a lethal condition with hepatocellular dysfunction, and liver transplantation is presently the only effective treatment. However, due to the limited availability of donors and the potential immune rejection, novel therapeutic strategies are actively sought to restore the normal hepatic architectures and functions, especially for livers with inherited metabolic dysfunctions or chronic diseases. Although the conventional cell therapy has shown promising results, the direct infusion of hepatocytes is hampered by limited hepatocyte sources, poor cell viability, and engraftment. Hence, this review mainly highlights the role of stem cells and progenitors as the alternative cell source and summarizes the potential approaches based on tissue engineering to improve the delivery efficiency of cells. Particularly, the underlying mechanisms for cell therapy using stem cells and progenitors are discussed in two main aspects: paracrine effect and cell differentiation. Moreover, tissue-engineering approaches using cell aggregates and decellularized liver scaffolds for bioengineering of functional hepatic constructs are discussed and compared in terms of the potential to replicate liver physiological structures. In the end, a potentially effective strategy combining the premium advantages of stem cell aggregates and decellularized liver scaffolds is proposed as the future direction of liver tissue engineering and regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: Stem cell; cell aggregate; decellularized liver scaffold; liver failure
Year: 2021 PMID: 35003615 PMCID: PMC8733710 DOI: 10.1177/2041731420986711
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Tissue Eng ISSN: 2041-7314 Impact factor: 7.813
Figure 1.A schematic illustrates the use of stem cell therapy, cell aggregate-based or decellularized liver scaffold-based tissue engineering strategies for the rescue of liver failure. To reconstruct a normal liver, stem cells/differentiated cells/bioengineered cell aggregates can be implanted into the abnormal liver or its decellularized counterpart.
Bioengineering of functional hepatic constructs based on cell aggregates.
| Cell type | Biomaterial | Sterilization method | Cell seeding method | Animal model | Implantation method | Maximal period | Experiment result | Highlights | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| iPSC-derived human hepatic progenitors | Collagen I-coated poly(ethylene glycol) hydrogel scaffold | N/A | Cell seeding on the top and bottom surface of the partially dehydrated scaffolds at a cell density of 1.25 × 108 cells/mL. | NOD.Cg-Prkdcscid Il2rgtm1Wjl/SzJ (NSG) immunodeficient mice (a mix of male and female, 6–8 weeks) | Implantation into the capsule of the caudate liver lobe. | In vitro: 14 days. In vivo: 28 days. | In vitro: formation of organoids with morphology, gene expression, protein secretion, drug metabolic functions closer to adult tissue. In vivo: good host integration; no significant fibrosis and inflammation; neo-vascularization; human serum secretion. | The porous scaffold supports the formation of functional hepatic progenitor organoids. | Ng et al.
|
| Primary rat mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) and mouse hepatocyte cell line (AML12 cells) | Alginate and collagen hydrogels | N/A | Encapsulation of rat MSCs (1 × 107 cells/mL) and AML12 cells (1 × 107 cells/mL) in the volvox spheres by a high voltage electrostatic field system. | SD rats (male, 6 weeks) with retrorsine-CCl4 induced liver injury | Implantation into the injured liver of rats (10 volvox spheres/rat). | In vitro: 14 days. In vivo: 48 days. | In vitro: hepatic differentiation of MSCs. In vivo: restoration of hepatic functions and regeneration of new normal liver tissues. | 3D dynamic co-culture of MSCs and hepatocytes inside microgels. | Chang et al.
|
| Human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line (HepG2 cells) and bovine endothelial cells (ECs) | GRGDSP peptide-conjugated alginate hydrogel | N/A | Encapsulation of HepG2 cells (3 × 108 cells/mL) within the hollow microfibers and seeding ECs on the surface of the fiber bundles for perfusion culture in microfluidics. | N/A | N/A | In vitro: 5 days. | In vitro: enhanced cell proliferation and hepatic functions, especially at higher flow rate; formation of endothelial cell networks. | Perfusion co-culture of HepG2 cells and endothelial cells with a lobule-like structure. | Yajima et al.
|
| Human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs)-derived hepatocytes and endothelial cells | Multi-component hydrogel polyelectrolyte fibers consisted of water-soluble chitin, galactose, collagen and alginate | N/A | Assembly of polyelectrolyte fibers by multi-interfacial polyelectrolyte complexation (MIPC) with endothelial cells at the center and hepatocytes at the periphery (1 × 107 cells/mL). | SCID mice with 70% of partial hepatectomy | Implantation into the injured livers of mice. | In vitro: 8 days. In vivo: 28 days. | Bioengineering of a lobule-like structure with genetically identical endothelial cells and hepatocytes derived from hiPSCs. | Du et al.
| |
| Rat liver cells (RLC-18) | Poly-L-lysine-alginate | N/A | Encapsulation of cells through electrodeposition at a density of 1 × 107 cells/mL. | N/A | N/A | In vitro: 16 days. | In vitro: higher hepatic function as compared with normal cell spheroids. | Bioengineering of a lobule-like structure. | Liu et al.
|
| HepG2 cells | Alginate microgels | N/A | Encapsulation of HepG2 cells in alginate microgels with glass beads (10 or 50 µm in diameter) at a density of ~1.75 × 106 cells/mL for perfusion culture. | N/A | N/A | In vitro: 12 days. | In vitro: maintenance of cell viability and hepatic functions as well as enhanced proliferation. | High throughput of viable and functional hepatocyte aggregates within microgels; establishment of an applicable storage protocol at ambient temperature for 48 h. | Erro et al.
|
| Primary rat hepatocytes and HUVECs | PDMS-based perfusion bioreactor | 70% ethanol and UV exposure | Perfusion culture by filling the bioreactor with HUVECs-coated hepatocyte (1:1) cell aggregates and poly-L-lactic acid (PLLA) fiber fragments. | N/A | N/A | In vitro: 7 days. | In vitro: high cell retainment (73.8%) and albumin production for cell aggregates mixed with PLLA fiber (1:1). | Bioengineering of liver tissue equivalents with fiber fragments to enhance cell retainment and oxygen and nutrient diffusion. | Pang et al.
|
| Human liver sinusoidal endothelial cell line (TMNK-1 cells) and HepG2 cells | Nylon 12-based perfusion system | 70% ethanol and UV exposure | HepG2 and TMNK-1 cells were cultured on PDMS honeycomb microwell arrays to form cell aggregates (1:1, 6 × 105 cells/cm2) and transferred to a customized bioreactor for perfusion culture with PLLA fibers fragments (1:2). | N/A | N/A | In vitro: 9 days. | In vitro: increased hepatic functions and maintenance of cell viability. | Perfusion co-culture of hepatocytes and endothelial cells for bioengineering of a large liver tissue equivalent. | Pang et al.
|
| Primary rat hepatocytes, normal human dermal fibroblasts (NHDFs) and primary human umbilical endothelial cells | Poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate (PEGDA), gelatin methacrylate (GelMA), collagen and fibrin hydrogels | Filter sterilization | A three-step process consisting of 3D-printing of hydrogel carriers, formation of endothelial cell (EC) cords by pipetting of HUVECs-contained collagen hydrogel (1 × 107 cells/mL) into printed channels, and physically entrapping of hepatocytes-NHDFs (1:1) hybrid aggregate (200 cells/aggregate)-contained fibrin or GelMA hydrogels (4.5 × 104 aggregates/mL) into the hepatic tissue infill spaces. | FNRG mice (male, 30–40 weeks old) with intermittent liver injuries induced by administration of 2-(2-nitro-4-trifluoro-methylbenzyol)-1,3-cyclohexanedione (NTBC) | Suture of the hepatic hydrogel carriers to the perigonadal fat pad. | In vivo: 14 days. | In vivo: enhanced albumin production for hepatic hydrogel carriers loaded with cell aggregates; improved host engraftment of hepatic hydrogel carriers. | Functional enhancement of hepatocyte aggregates; 3D printing of vascular structures; co-culture of endothelial cells with hepatocytes. | Grigoryan et al.
|
| Murine oval liver progenitor cell line | Bilateral vascularized chambers (growth factor-reduced Matrigel within the cylindrical silicon tubing fitted around the superficial epigastric vascular pedicle and sealed with melted bone wax) | N/A | Direct injection of single-cell suspension (4 × 106 cells/mL) or cell aggregates (9 aggregates with the same cell number) into the bilateral vascularized chambers. | SCID mice (male, 6–8 weeks, 20–30 g) | Implantation at the groin of mice. | In vitro: 10 days. In vivo: 45 days. | In vitro: proliferative progenitor cells and matured hepatocytes at the periphery and center of cell aggregates, respectively. In vivo: enhanced cell survival and differentiation; glandular organization of cells and vascularization. | Bioengineering of vascularized liver constructs in situ via applying cell aggregates. | Yap et al.
|
| Primary mouse hepatocytes and human nonparenchymal cell lines (endothelial cells, cholangiocytes and stellate cells) | Bilateral vascularized chambers with gelatinized FGF-2 microspheres coated on the surface (1.125 mL in volume). | N/A | Injection of hepatocytes (5 × 106 cells) and nonparenchymal cell lines (1 × 106 cells for each type of cells) with diluted Matrigel into the chamber. | Balb/c mice (female, 8 weeks) with 50% hepatectomy | Implantation into intraperitoneal cavity of the mice | In vitro and in vivo: 7 days. | In vitro: formation of sinusoid-like structures; maintenance of cell viability and hepatic functions. In vivo: formation of sophisticated liver-like structures. | Bioengineering of an implantable bioartificial liver that consists of sinusoid-like hepatic organoids for the repair of acute liver failure. Co-culture of hepatocytes and nonparenchymal cells. | Soto-Gutierrez et al.
|
Bioengineering of functional hepatic constructs based on decellularized liver scaffolds.
| Cell type | Biomaterial | Sterilization method | Cell seeding method | Animal model | Implantation method | Maximal period | Experiment result | Highlights | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human EpCAM+ liver cells | Decellularized rat liver scaffolds | 0.1% peracetic acid and UV exposure | Cells were infused into the decellularized liver scaffolds via the hepatic artery at a density of 2 × 106 cells/mL. | Wister rats (male, 180–200 g) with acute liver failure induced by D-GalN. | Intraperitoneal implantation into the mesentery of rats. | In vitro: 7 days. In vivo: 30 days. | In vitro: maintenance of cell proliferation and enhanced hepatic functions. In vivo: improved survival of rats and maintenance of hepatic functions. | Bioengineering of hepatic constructs using decellularized liver tissues and hepatic progenitor cells for support of liver functions. | Vishwakarma et al.
|
| Mouse bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem/stromal cells | Decellularized mouse liver scaffolds | Gamma irradiation | Cells were infused via the portal vein for 5 times with 10-min intervals (1 × 107 cells/perfusion). | NOD-SCID mice with CCl4 administration. | Implantation into the liver lobe and sealing with hemostatic mesh and biological glue. | In vitro and in vivo: 28 days. | In vitro: enhanced hepatic functions. In vivo: maintenance of hepatic functions and rescue of liver failure. | Hepatic differentiation of MSCs inside decellularized liver tissues. | Jiang et al.
|
| Porcine iPSCs | Decellularized rat whole liver scaffolds | 0.1% peracetic acid | iPSC-derived hepatocyte-like cells were infused into the scaffolds via portal vein in a four-step manner with 30-min intervals (5 × 106 cells). | Sprague-Dawley rats (230–270 g) with left nephrectomy and 24-h administration of cyclosporine for immunosuppression. | Injection of heparin into the mice; Anastomosis of the donor portal vein (PV) and inferior vena cava (IVC) to the host renal artery and renal vein using cannula, respectively. | In vitro: 20 days. In vivo: 2 h. | In vitro: improved hepatic differentiation of iPSCs. In vivo: maintenance of scaffold structure and hepatic functions but coagulation after 1–2 h of blood reperfusion. | Bioengineering of whole liver organs using decellularized liver scaffolds and iPSC-derived hepatocyte-like cells. | Park et al.
|
| Neuro-glia antigen 2 (NG2)+ hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) | Decellularized mouse whole liver scaffolds. | N/A | Cells were infused into the decellularized liver scaffolds via PV and IVC in a two-step manner with 30-min intervals (3 × 107 cells). | C57BL/6 mice (22–30 g) with right nephrectomy and liver cirrhosis induced by diethylnitrosamine (DEN). | Injection of heparin into the tail vein of mice; Anastomosis of the donor PV and IVC to the host renal artery and renal vein using stents, respectively. | In vitro: 21 days. In vivo: 28 days. | In vitro: enhanced hepatic differentiation of HPCs. In vivo: superior restoration of hepatic functions for rats with implantation of cell-loaded scaffolds than that with the injection of cell suspensions. | Bioengineering of whole liver organs using decellularized liver scaffolds and hematopoietic progenitor cells for the treatment of liver cirrhosis. | Zhang et al.
|
| Primary rat hepatocytes | Decellularized rat whole liver scaffolds | 0.1% peracetic acid and antibiotic-contained PBS | A four-step perfusion of hepatocytes into the decellularized rat liver tissues via portal vein with 10-min intervals (1.25 × 107 cells/perfusion). | Lewis rats (male, 250–300 g) with unilateral nephrectomy. | Administration of heparin and glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitor for anti-coagulation; anastomosis of donor PV and IVC to the host left renal artery and left renal vein using stents, respectively. | In vitro: 10 days. In vivo: 8 h. | In vitro: high cell engraftment and improved cell distribution within 2 days; vascular lining on day 3 when infusion of endothelial cells after hepatocytes; maintenance of cell viability and hepatic functions. In vivo: maintenance of cell viability and hepatic functions. | Bioengineering whole liver organs using decellularized liver scaffolds and primary rat hepatocytes. | Uygun et al.
|
| Primary rat hepatocytes | Heparin-coated decellularized rat cadaveric liver lobes | Physiological saline with antibiotics | Formation of cell aggregates under the rotating condition for 24 h (~1 × 108 cells) and infusion via the portal vein for 4-h static culture, after which reperfusion using cell medium only for another 2 h. | Lewis rats (male, 8–12 weeks, 180–250 g) with 90% hepatectomy | Anastomosis of the donor PV and IVC to the host inferior and superior PV, respectively. | In vivo: 72 h. | In vivo: no thrombosis; prolonged survival of rats and improved hepatic functions. | Recellularization using hepatocyte aggregates and coating of heparin for the elimination of thrombosis. | Bao et al.
|
| Human EA.hy926 endothelial cells and HepG2 cells | Decellularized porcine whole liver scaffolds from adult pigs (40–50 kg) | N/A | Perfusion of 4.5 × 108 HepG2 cells via the portal vein in a three-step manner; heparin-gelatin coating and perfusion of endothelial cells via the portal vein (3.5 × 108 cells) and hepatic artery (1.5 × 108 cells) in a four-step manner. | Hybrid pigs (11–13 kg) | Anastomoses of PV and IH-IVC of the liver scaffold to aorta and IVC of the host liver in an end to side fashion. | In vitro: 10 days. In vivo: 1 h. | Bioengineering of vascularized whole liver organs using decellularized liver scaffolds and heparin-gelatin coating for enhanced endothelial recellularization. Co-culture of endothelial cells and hepatocytes. | Hussein et al.
| |
| GFP-labeled vascular endothelial cells (MS1) | Rat anti-mouse CD31 antibody-conjugated decellularized whole liver scaffold from piglets (5–8 kg) | Gamma irradiation at 1.2 Mrad | A two-step process consisting of static and perfusion cell seeding through portal vein (PV), hepatic artery (HA), suprahepatic (SH)- and intrahepatic- inferior vena cava (IVC) at a cell density of 1 × 107 cells/mL and rotating condition. | Normal Yorkshire pigs (female, 60–80 kg) | Anastomoses of PV and IH-IVC of the donor liver scaffold to aorta and IVC of the host liver in an end to side fashion. | Bioengineering of vascularized whole liver organs by conjugation of anti- CD31 antibody for enhancement of endothelial recellularization. | Ko et al.
|
Figure 2.Bioengineering of implantable hepatic aggregates: (a) the process for generation of microspheres and volvox spheres using mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) and hepatocytes (AML12). Scale bar: 200 µm and (b) the aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) concentration indicating liver injury level in the normal rats (Normal), injured rats (Group A), injured rats with implantation of MSCs/AML12-encapsulated volvox spheres (Group B), injured rats with implantation of volvox spheres only (Group C), injured rats with implantation of MSCs-encapsulated volvox spheres (Group D), or injured rats with implantation of AML12-capsulated volvox spheres (Group E) on week 0, 4 and 6.
**p < 0.01,***p < 0.001, compared with the normal group. Adapted with permission from Chang et al.
Figure 3.Bioengineering of a cell aggregate-based bioartificial liver: (a) dynamic culture of hepatocyte (HepG2)/endothelial cell (TMNK-1) aggregates in a customized 3D perfusion system and (b) Immunofluorescent staining of HepG2/TMNK-1 cell aggregates in the microwells 24 h after cell incubation.
Red: HepG2 cells; green: TMNK-1 endothelial cells. Scale bar: 100 µm. Adapted with permission from Pang et al.
Figure 4.Bioengineering of vascular hepatic constructs: (a) fabrication of lobule-like structures through encapsulation of hepatocytes within hydrogel fibers and seeding endothelial cells on the surface. Red: endothelial cell (EC); green: HepG2 cell; blue: cell nucleus. Scale bar: 50 µm. Adapted with permission from Yajima et al. (b) fabrication of lobule-like structures through encapsulation of liver cells and multilayer assembly. Red: dead cell; green: live cell. Scale bar: 250 µm. Adapted with permission from Liu et al. and (c) 3D printing of vascularized hepatic constructs by seeding endothelial cells and hepatocyte aggregates into the 3D-printed channels and the carry chamber, respectively. Red: endothelial cell (HUVEC); green: hepatocyte. Scale bar: 1 mm. Adapted with permission from Grigoryan et al.
Figure 5.Bioengineering of lobule-like structures: (a) the process for generation of vascularized hepatic constructs through multi-interfacial polyelectrolyte complexation (MIPC) with genetically identical endothelial cells and hepatocytes derived from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), (b) the albumin production of hepatocytes encapsulated in the fibers with or without endothelial cells in vitro. *p < 0.001, and (c) immunofluorescent staining images of hepatocytes and endothelial cells 4 or 6 weeks after implantation of the bioengineered hepatic constructs in vivo. Red: human albumin-positive hepatocyte; green: CD31 antibody-positive endothelial cell; blue: cell nucleus. Scale bar in i, ii, iii and iv: 100 µm. Scale bar in v and vi: 50 µm. Adapted with permission from Du et al.
Figure 6.A schematic illustrates decellularization and recellularization processes for bioengineering of a functional liver construct.
Adapted with permission from Nicolas et al.
Advantages and disadvantages of various recellularization methods.
| Recellularization methods | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Continuous infusion | • Rapid and easy preparation | • Low engraftment and uneven distribution of
cells |
| Multi-step infusion | • Good cell engraftment and distribution | • Time-consuming preparation |
| Multi-channel infusion | • Suitable for infusion of multiple cell
types | • Time-consuming preparation |
| Multi-positional parenchymal injection | • Easy operation | • Potential damage to hepatic structures |
| Implantation of cell aggregates | • Good cell viability and enhanced hepatic
functions | • Blockage of vasculatures during continuous
infusion |
Figure 7.Bioengineering of whole liver organs: (a) the re-endothelialization process for decellularized liver scaffolds with vascular surface modification using either (i) heparin-gelatin or (ii) CD31 antibody. IH-IVC: intrahepatic inferior vena cava; PV: portal vein; RV: renal vein; RA: renal artery; HA: hepatic artery; SH-IVC: suprahepatic inferior vena cava, (b) Fluoroscopic angiography and immunofluorescent staining images of the unseeded decellularized liver (EC(-)) and re-endothelialized CD31 antibody-conjugated liver (EC(+)) one day after implantation in vivo. Red: platelet; green: endothelial cell (EC); blue: cell nucleus (Nu). Scale bar: 50 µm. Black arrows point to vasculatures indicating vascular patency. White arrows point to vascular vessel walls, and (c) the quantitative fluorescent intensity of platelets in EC(-) and EC(+) one day after implantation in vivo.
*p < 0.05. Adapted with permission from Ko et al.