Partial decellularization eliminates immunogenicity in tracheal allografts

Author:

Tan Zheng Hong12ORCID,Liu Lumei1,Dharmadhikari Sayali12,Shontz Kimberly M.1,Kreber Lily2,Sperber Sarah1,Yu Jane2,Byun Woo Yul2,Nyirjesy Sarah C.3,Manning Amy3,Reynolds Susan D.4,Chiang Tendy13

Affiliation:

1. Center of Regenerative Medicine, Abigail Wexner Research Institute, Nationwide Children's Hospital Columbus Ohio USA

2. College of Medicine, The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

3. Department of Pediatric Otolaryngology Nationwide Children's Hospital Columbus Ohio USA

4. Center for Perinatal Research, Nationwide Children's Hospital Columbus Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractThere is currently no suitable autologous tissue to bridge large tracheal defects. As a result, no standard of care exists for long‐segment tracheal reconstruction. Tissue engineering has the potential to create a scaffold from allografts or xenografts that can support neotissue regeneration identical to the native trachea. Recent advances in tissue engineering have led to the idea of partial decellularization that allows for the creation of tracheal scaffolds that supports tracheal epithelial formation while preserving mechanical properties. However, the ability of partial decellularization to eliminate graft immunogenicity remains unknown, and understanding the immunogenic properties of partially decellularized tracheal grafts (PDTG) is a critical step toward clinical translation. Here, we determined that tracheal allograft immunogenicity results in epithelial cell sloughing and replacement with dysplastic columnar epithelium and that partial decellularization creates grafts that are able to support an epithelium without histologic signs of rejection. Moreover, allograft implantation elicits CD8+ T‐cell infiltration, a mediator of rejection, while PDTG did not. Hence, we establish that partial decellularization eliminates allograft immunogenicity while creating a scaffold for implantation that can support spatially appropriate airway regeneration.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Biomedical Engineering,Biotechnology

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