Transplantation of organs, cells, or tissues from one species to another, known as xenotransplantation, has the potential to alleviate organ donor shortages and enhance the success of organ transplantation. However, the possibility of immunological rejection by the recipient is one of the biggest difficulties associated with xenotransplantation. The creation of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), also known as NETosis, is hypothesized as a mechanism of rejection. Innovations in microfluidics and co-culturing techniques have provided access to several classes of microengineered model systems in experimental models, connecting animal research and traditional in vitro methods such as organoids, microphysiological systems, and organs-on-chip. To achieve this goal, we established a perfusable 3D Xeno vessel chip using a porcine aortic endothelial cell line and examined how NETs grow when isolated human and primate neutrophils were used. Neutrophils from both humans and monkeys displayed the usual NETosis phases, including nuclear decondensation, enlargement, and rounding of DNA, occupying the entire cytoplasm, and discharge of fragmented DNA after cell membrane rupture. Using confocal fluorescence imaging of DNA and citrullinated histone colocalization and DNA histone complex formation in supernatants from xeno vessel chips, we confirmed NETs generation by human and monkey neutrophils when cocultured in a xeno-vessel chip.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jim.2023.113537 | DOI Listing |
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