Papers

Peer-reviewed International journal
Feb, 2010

Intramuscular transplantation of engineered hepatic tissue constructs corrects acute and chronic liver failure in mice.

Journal of hepatology
  • Nalu Navarro-Alvarez
  • Alejandro Soto-Gutierrez
  • Yong Chen
  • Jose Caballero-Corbalan
  • Wael Hassan
  • Satoru Kobayashi
  • Yoshitaka Kondo
  • Masaya Iwamuro
  • Kazuhide Yamamoto
  • Eisaku Kondo
  • Noriaki Tanaka
  • Ira J Fox
  • Naoya Kobayashi
  • Display all

Volume
52
Number
2
First page
211
Last page
9
Language
English
Publishing type
DOI
10.1016/j.jhep.2009.11.019

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Transplantation of isolated hepatocytes holds great promise as an alternative to whole organ liver transplantation. For treatment of liver failure, access to the portal circulation has significant risks and intrahepatic hepatocyte engraftment is poor. In advanced cirrhosis, transplantation into an extrahepatic site is necessary and intrasplenic engraftment is short-lived. Strategies that allow repeated extrahepatic infusion of hepatocytes could improve the efficacy and safety of hepatocyte transplantation for the treatment of liver failure. METHODS: A non-immunogenic self-assembling peptide nanofiber (SAPNF) was developed as a three-dimensional scaffold and combined with growth factors derived from a conditionally immortalized human hepatocyte cell line to engineer a hepatic tissue graft that would allow hepatocyte engraftment outside the liver. RESULTS: The hepatic tissue constructs maintained hepatocyte-specific gene expression and functionality in vitro. When transplanted into skeletal muscle as an extrahepatic site for engraftment, the engineered hepatic grafts provided life-saving support in models of acute, fulminant, and chronic liver failure that recapitulates these clinical diseases. CONCLUSIONS: SAPNF-engineered hepatic constructs engrafted and functioned as hepatic tissues within the muscle to provide life-sustaining liver support. These engineered tissue constructs contained no animal products that would limit their development as a therapeutic approach.

Link information
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhep.2009.11.019
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20022655
ID information
  • DOI : 10.1016/j.jhep.2009.11.019
  • Pubmed ID : 20022655

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