Multipotent bone marrow cell-seeded polymeric composites drive long-term, definitive urinary bladder tissue regeneration

Matthew Bury,Natalie J. Fuller,Xinlong Wang,Yvonne Y. Chan,Renea M. Sturm, Sang Su Oh, Laurel A. Sofer,Hans C. Arora,Tiffany T. Sharma,Bonnie G. Nolan, Wei Feng, Rebecca R. Rabizadeh, Milica Barac, Sonia S. Edassery, Madeleine M. Goedegebuure, Larry W. Wang,Balaji Ganesh,Lisa C. Halliday, Mark E. Seniw,Seby L. Edassery,Nadim B. Mahmud,Matthias D. Hofer, Kevin E. McKenna,Earl Y. Cheng,Guillermo A. Ameer,Arun K. Sharma

PNAS NEXUS(2024)

引用 0|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
To date, there are no efficacious translational solutions for end-stage urinary bladder dysfunction. Current surgical strategies, including urinary diversion and bladder augmentation enterocystoplasty (BAE), utilize autologous intestinal segments (e.g. ileum) to increase bladder capacity to protect renal function. Considered the standard of care, BAE is fraught with numerous short- and long-term clinical complications. Previous clinical trials employing tissue engineering approaches for bladder tissue regeneration have also been unable to translate bench-top findings into clinical practice. Major obstacles still persist that need to be overcome in order to advance tissue-engineered products into the clinical arena. These include scaffold/bladder incongruencies, the acquisition and utility of appropriate cells for anatomic and physiologic tissue recapitulation, and the choice of an appropriate animal model for testing. In this study, we demonstrate that the elastomeric, bladder biomechanocompatible poly(1,8-octamethylene-citrate-co-octanol) (PRS; synthetic) scaffold coseeded with autologous bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells and CD34+ hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells support robust long-term, functional bladder tissue regeneration within the context of a clinically relevant baboon bladder augmentation model simulating bladder trauma. Partially cystectomized baboons were independently augmented with either autologous ileum or stem-cell-seeded small-intestinal submucosa (SIS; a commercially available biological scaffold) or PRS grafts. Stem-cell synergism promoted functional trilayer bladder tissue regeneration, including whole-graft neurovascularization, in both cell-seeded grafts. However, PRS-augmented animals demonstrated fewer clinical complications and more advantageous tissue characterization metrics compared to ileum and SIS-augmented animals. Two-year study data demonstrate that PRS/stem-cell-seeded grafts drive bladder tissue regeneration and are a suitable alternative to BAE.
更多
查看译文
关键词
urinary bladder,regenerative engineering,autologous stem cells,biomechanocompatible scaffold
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要