Normothermic machine perfusion provides a powerful tool to improve donor kidney preservation and a route for the delivery of pharmacological or gene therapeutic interventions prior to transplantation. However, perfusion at normothermic temperatures requires adequate tissue oxygenation to meet the physiological metabolic demand. For this purpose, the addition of appropriate oxygen carriers (OCs) to the perfusion solution is essential to ensure a sufficient oxygen supply and reduce the risk for tissue injury due to hypoxia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeart transplantation is associated with major hurdles, including the limited number of available organs for transplantation, the risk of rejection due to genetic discrepancies, and the burden of immunosuppression. In this study, we demonstrated the feasibility of permanent genetic engineering of the heart during perfusion. Lentiviral vectors encoding for short hairpin RNAs targeting beta2-microglobulin (shβ2m) and class II transactivator (shCIITA) were delivered to the graft during two hours of normothermic EVHP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFXenotransplantation offers a promising alternative to circumvent the lack of donated human organs available for transplantation. Different attempts to improve the survival of xenografts led to the generation of transgenic pigs expressing various combinations of human protective genes or knocked out for specific antigens. Currently, testing the efficiency of porcine organs carrying different genetic modifications in preventing xenogeneic immune responses completely relies on assays, humanized mouse models, or non-human primate transplantation models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFXenotransplantation reemerged as a promising alternative to conventional transplantation enlarging the available organ pool. However, success of xenotransplantation depends on the design and selection of specific genetic modifications and on the development of robust assays allowing for a precise assessment of tissue-specific immune responses. Nevertheless, cell-based assays are often compromised by low proliferative capacity of primary cells.
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