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Engineering transplantable jejunal mucosal grafts using primary patient-derived organoids from children with intestinal failure

Authors :
Paola Bonfanti
Anna Baulies
Vivian S. W. Li
Nikhil Thapar
P De Coppi
L Meran
Ambrosius P. Snijders
Michael Orford
Anna Kucharska
Riana Gaifulina
Simon Eaton
Elizabeth M. A. Hirst
Geraint M.H. Thomas
Lucy M. Collinson
Isobel Massie
S. Eli
Julia König
Anne Weston
Peter Faull
Alfonso M Tedeschi
Alessandro Filippo Pellegata
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

Intestinal failure (IF), following extensive anatomical or functional loss of small intestine (SI), has debilitating long-term effects on infants and children with this condition. Priority of care is to increase the child’s length of functional intestine, jejunum in particular, to improve nutritional independence. Here we report a robust protocol for reconstruction of autologous intestinal mucosal grafts using primary IF patient materials. Human jejunal intestinal organoids derived from paediatric IF patients can be expanded efficiently in vitro with region-specific markers preserved after long-term culture. Decellularized human intestinal matrix with intact ultrastructure is used as biological scaffolds. Proteomic and Raman spectroscopic analyses reveal highly analogous biochemical composition of decellularized human SI and colon matrix, implying that they can both be utilised as scaffolds for jejunal graft reconstruction. Indeed, seeding of primary human jejunal organoids to either SI or colonic scaffolds in vitro can efficiently reconstruct functional jejunal grafts with persistent disaccharidase activity as early as 4 days after seeding, which can further survive and mature after transplantation in vivo. Our findings pave the way towards regenerative medicine for IF patients.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9a8d5f36c66744d609ff9cc3e85598e8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/854083