10 research outputs found

    Stretched Extracellular Matrix Proteins Turn Fouling and Are Functionally Rescued by the Chaperones Albumin and Casein

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    While evidence is mounting that cells exploit protein unfolding for mechanochemical signal conversion (mechanotransduction), what mechanisms are in place to deal with the unwanted consequences of exposing hydrophobic residues upon force-induced protein unfolding? Here, we show that mechanical chaperones exist that can transiently bind to hydrophobic residues that are freshly exposed by mechanical force. The stretch-upregulated binding of albumin or casein to fibronectin fibers is reversible and does not inhibit fiber contraction once the tension is released

    Novel immortalized human fetal liver cell line, cBAL111, has the potential to differentiate into functional hepatocytes

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    Abstract Background A clonal cell line that combines both stable hepatic function and proliferation capacity is desirable for in vitro applications that depend on hepatic function, such as pharmacological or toxicological assays and bioartificial liver systems. Here we describe the generation and characterization of a clonal human cell line for in vitro hepatocyte applications. Results Cell clones derived from human fetal liver cells were immortalized by over-expression of telomerase reverse transcriptase. The resulting cell line, cBAL111, displayed hepatic functionality similar to the parental cells prior to immortalization, and did not grow in soft agar. Cell line cBAL111 expressed markers of immature hepatocytes, like glutathione S transferase and cytokeratin 19, as well as progenitor cell marker CD146 and was negative for lidocaine elimination. On the other hand, the cBAL111 cells produced urea, albumin and cytokeratin 18 and eliminated galactose. In contrast to hepatic cell lines NKNT-3 and HepG2, all hepatic functions were expressed in cBAL111, although there was considerable variation in their levels compared with primary mature hepatocytes. When transplanted in the spleen of immunodeficient mice, cBAL111 engrafted into the liver and partly differentiated into hepatocytes showing expression of human albumin and carbamoylphosphate synthetase without signs of cell fusion. Conclusion This novel liver cell line has the potential to differentiate into mature hepatocytes to be used for in vitro hepatocyte applications.</p

    Imaging of primary human hepatocytes performed with micron-sized iron oxide particles and clinical magnetic resonance tomography

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    Transplantation of primary human hepatocytes is a promising approach in certain liver diseases. For the visualization of the hepatocytes during and following cell application and the ability of a timely response to potential complications, a non-invasive modality for imaging the transplanted cells has to be established. The aim of this study was to label primary human hepatocytes with micron-sized iron oxide particles (MPIOs), enabling the detection of cells by clinical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Primary human hepatocytes isolated from 13 different donors were used for the labelling experiments. Following the dose-finding studies, hepatocytes were incubated with 30 particles/cell for 4 hrs in an adhesion culture. Particle incorporation was investigated via light, fluorescence and electron microscopy, and labelled cells were fixed and analysed in an agarose suspension by a 3.0 Tesla MR scanner. The hepatocytes were enzymatically resuspended and analysed during a 5-day reculture period for viability, total protein, enzyme leakage (aspartate aminotransferase [AST], lactate dehydrogenase [LDH]) and metabolic activity (urea, albumin). A mean uptake of 18 particles/cell could be observed, and the primary human hepatocytes were clearly detectable by MR instrumentation. The particle load was not affected by resuspension and showed no alternations during the culture period. Compared to control groups, labelling and resuspension had no adverse effects on the viability, enzyme leakage and metabolic activity of the human hepatocytes. The feasibility of preparing MPIO-labelled primary human hepatocytes detectable by clinical MR equipment was shown in vitro. MPIO-labelled cells could serve for basic research and quality control in the clinical setting of human hepatocyte transplantation

    Transcatheter based electromechanical mapping guided intramyocardial transplantation and in vivo tracking of human stem cell based three dimensional microtissues in the porcine heart

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    Stem cells have been repeatedly suggested for cardiac regeneration after myocardial infarction (MI). However, the low retention rate of single cell suspensions limits the efficacy of current therapy concepts so far. Taking advantage of three dimensional (3D) cellular self-assembly prior to transplantation may be beneficial to overcome these limitations. In this pilot study we investigate the principal feasibility of intramyocardial delivery of in-vitro generated stem cell-based 3D microtissues (3D-MTs) in a porcine model. 3D-MTs were generated from iron-oxide (MPIO) labeled human adipose-tissue derived mesenchymal stem cells (ATMSCs) using a modified hanging-drop method. Nine pigs (33 ± 2 kg) comprising seven healthy ones and two with chronic MI in the left ventricle (LV) anterior wall were included. The pigs underwent intramyocardial transplantation of 16 × 10(3) 3D-MTs (1250 cells/MT; accounting for 2 × 10(7) single ATMSCs) into the anterior wall of the healthy pigs (n = 7)/the MI border zone of the infarcted (n = 2) of the LV using a 3D NOGA electromechanical mapping guided, transcatheter based approach. Clinical follow-up (FU) was performed for up to five weeks and in-vivo cell-tracking was performed using serial magnet resonance imaging (MRI). Thereafter, the hearts were harvested and assessed by PCR and immunohistochemistry. Intramyocardial transplantation of human ATMSC based 3D-MTs was successful in eight animals (88.8%) while one pig (without MI) died during the electromechanical mapping due to sudden cardiac-arrest. During FU, no arrhythmogenic, embolic or neurological events occurred in the treated pigs. Serial MRI confirmed the intramyocardial presence of the 3D-MTs by detection of the intracellular iron-oxide MPIOs during FU. Intramyocardial retention of 3D-MTs was confirmed by PCR analysis and was further verified on histology and immunohistochemical analysis. The 3D-MTs appeared to be viable, integrated and showed an intact micro architecture. We demonstrate the principal feasibility and safety of intramyocardial transplantation of in-vitro generated stem cell-based 3D-MTs. Multimodal cell-tracking strategies comprising advanced imaging and in-vitro tools allow for in-vivo monitoring and post-mortem analysis of transplanted 3D-MTs. The concept of 3D cellular self-assembly represents a promising application format as a next generation technology for cell-based myocardial regeneration

    Safety and efficacy of cardiopoietic stem cells in the treatment of post-infarction left-ventricular dysfunction - from cardioprotection to functional repair in a translational pig infarction model

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    To date, clinical success of cardiac cell-therapies remains limited. To enhance the cardioreparative properties of stem cells, the concept of lineage-specification through cardiopoietic-guidance has been recently suggested. However, so far, only results from murine studies and from a clinical pilot-trial in chronic heart-failure (CHF) are available, while systematic evidence of its therapeutic-efficacy is still lacking. Importantly, also no data from large animals or for other indications are available. Therefore, we here investigate the therapeutic-efficacy of human cardiopoietic stem cells in the treatment of post-infarction LV-dysfunction using a translational pig-model. Using growth-factor priming, lineage-specification of human bone-marrow derived MSCs was achieved to generate cardiopoietic stem cells according to GMP-compliant protocols. Thereafter, pigs with post-infarction LV-dysfunction (sub-acute phase;1-month) were randomized to either receive transcatheter NOGA 3D electromechanical-mapping guided intramyocardial transplantation of cardiopoietic cells or saline (control). After 30days, cardiac MRI (cMRI) was performed for functional evaluation and in-vivo cell-tracking. This approach was coupled with a comprehensive post-mortem cell-fate and mode-of-repair analysis. Cardiopoietic cell therapy was safe and ejection-fraction was significantly higher when compared to controls (p = 0.012). It further prevented maladaptive LV-remodeling and revealed a significantly lower relative and total infarct-size (p = 0.043 and p = 0.012). As in-vivo tracking and post-mortem analysis displayed only limited intramyocardial cardiopoietic cell-integration, the significant induction of neo-angiogenesis (∼40% higher; p = 0.003) and recruitment of endogenous progenitors (∼2.5x higher; p = 0.008) to the infarct border-zone appeared to be the major modes-of-repair. This is the first report using a pre-clinical large animal-model to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of cardiopoietic stem cells for the treatment of post-infarction LV-dysfunction to prevent negative LV-remodeling and subsequent CHF. It further provides insight into post-delivery cardiopoietic cell-fate and suggests the mechanisms of cardiopoietic cell-induced cardiac-repair. The adoption of GMP-/GLP-compliant methodologies may accelerate the translation into a phase-I clinical-trial in patients with post-ischemic LV-dysfunction broadening the current indication of this interesting cell-type

    Preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV in resource-limited settings

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    Mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) before, during and after delivery may result in the acquisition of HIV for 30-35% of infants of HIV-infected mothers. Peripartum HIV transmission can be reduced to under 5% in resource-limited settings using a feasible prophylactic antiretroviral regimen. Reducing postnatal transmission through breastfeeding, whilst maintaining child survival, is an urgent priority, given that breastfeeding causes one-third to one-half of all infant HIV infections. Recent evidence highlights the impact of breastfeeding duration and pattern, and hazards associated with the avoidance of breastfeeding in different settings. New international guidelines on HIV and infant feeding have been published. Despite knowledge of how to reduce MTCT of HIV in resource-poor settings, an unacceptably low proportion of women access prevention of MTCT services (PMTCT); follow-up of women and children is poor. To improve survival of mothers and children, health services need to be strengthened, with the integration of PMTCT into existing maternal and child health services
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