scholarly journals Towards water-free biobanks: long-term dry-preservation at room temperature of desiccation-sensitive enzyme luciferase in air-dried insect cells

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shingo Kikuta ◽  
Shunsuke J. Watanabe ◽  
Ryoichi Sato ◽  
Oleg Gusev ◽  
Alexander Nesmelov ◽  
...  

AbstractDesiccation-tolerant cultured cells Pv11 derived from the anhydrobiotic Polypedilum vanderplanki embryo endure complete desiccation because of their ametabolic state and resume their metabolism after rehydration. These features led us to develop a novel dry preservation technology for enzymes as it was still unclear whether Pv11 cells preserved an exogenous enzyme in the dry state. This study shows that Pv11 cells protect an exogenous desiccation-sensitive enzyme, luciferase, preserving the enzymatic activity even after dry storage for 372 days at room temperature. A process including pre-incubation with trehalose, dehydration, storage, and rehydration allowed Pv11 (Pvll-Luc) cells stably expressing luciferase to survive desiccation and still emit luminescence caused by luciferase after rehydration. Luminescence produced by luciferase in Pvll-Luc cells after rehydration did not significantly decrease in presence of a translation inhibitor, showing that the activity did not derive from de novo enzyme synthesis following the resumption of cell metabolism. These findings indicate that the surviving Pv11 cells almost completely protect luciferase during desiccation. Lacking of the preincubation step resulted in the loss of luciferase activity after rehydration. We showed that preincubation with trehalose associated to induction of desiccation-tolerant related genes in Pv11 cells allowed effective in vivo preservation of enzymes in the dry state.

1998 ◽  
Vol 550 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Senuma ◽  
S. Franceschin ◽  
J. G. Hilborn ◽  
P. Tissiéres ◽  
P. Frey

AbstractA new approach to the vesico-ureteral reflux could be a local regeneration of the defective vesicoureteral junction by transplanting living cells to the target site. The aim of this work is to provide a long-term effective treatment by producing bioresorbable microspheres which can act as support matrix for those cells, with the goal of an in vivo transfer of the in vitro cultured cells with a minimal surgical procedure. After microsphere degradation, the cells should be integrated into the muscular structure of the junction. Most innovative is that these are cultured muscle and urothelial cells from the bladder of the same patient.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Zhan ◽  
Manish Muhuri ◽  
Phillip W. L. Tai ◽  
Guangping Gao

Conventional vaccinations and immunotherapies have encountered major roadblocks in preventing infectious diseases like HIV, influenza, and malaria. These challenges are due to the high genomic variation and immunomodulatory mechanisms inherent to these diseases. Passive transfer of broadly neutralizing antibodies may offer partial protection, but these treatments require repeated dosing. Some recombinant viral vectors, such as those based on lentiviruses and adeno-associated viruses (AAVs), can confer long-term transgene expression in the host after a single dose. Particularly, recombinant (r)AAVs have emerged as favorable vectors, given their high in vivo transduction efficiency, proven clinical efficacy, and low immunogenicity profiles. Hence, rAAVs are being explored to deliver recombinant antibodies to confer immunity against infections or to diminish the severity of disease. When used as a vaccination vector for the delivery of antigens, rAAVs enable de novo synthesis of foreign proteins with the conformation and topology that resemble those of natural pathogens. However, technical hurdles like pre-existing immunity to the rAAV capsid and production of anti-drug antibodies can reduce the efficacy of rAAV-vectored immunotherapies. This review summarizes rAAV-based prophylactic and therapeutic strategies developed against infectious diseases that are currently being tested in pre-clinical and clinical studies. Technical challenges and potential solutions will also be discussed.


1982 ◽  
Vol 155 (4) ◽  
pp. 968-980 ◽  
Author(s):  
M A Cheever ◽  
P D Greenberg ◽  
A Fefer ◽  
S Gillis

Spleen cells from C57BL/6 mice immunized in vivo with a syngeneic Friend virus-induced leukemia, FBL-3, were specifically activated by culture for 7 d with FBL-3, then nonspecifically induced to proliferate in vitro for 12 d by addition of supernatants from concanavalin A-stimulated lymphocytes containing interleukin 2 (IL-2). Such long-term cultured T lymphocytes have previously been shown to specifically lyse FBL-3 and to mediate specific adoptive therapy of advanced disseminated FBL-3 when used as an adjunct to cyclophosphamide (CY) in adoptive chemoimmunotherapy. Because the cultured cells are dependent upon IL-2 for proliferation and survival in vitro, their efficacy in vivo is potentially limited by the availability of endogenous IL-2. Thus, the aim of the current study was to determine whether exogenously administered purified IL-2 could augment the in vivo efficacy of long-term cultured T lymphocytes. Purified IL-2 alone or as an adjunct to CY as ineffective in tumor therapy. However, IL-2 was extremely effective in augmenting the efficacy of IL-2-dependent long-term cultured T lymphocytes in adoptive chemoimmunotherapy. The mechanism by which IL-2 functions in vivo is presumably by promoting in vivo growth and/or survival of adoptively transferred cells. This assumption was supported by the findings that IL-2 did not enhance the modest therapeutic efficacy of irradiated long-term cultured cells that were incapable of proliferating in the host and was ineffective in augmenting the in vivo efficacy of noncultured immune cells that are not immediately dependent upon exogenous IL-2 for survival.


Nanomaterials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 2184
Author(s):  
Maria Suciu ◽  
Claudiu Mirescu ◽  
Izabell Crăciunescu ◽  
Sergiu Gabriel Macavei ◽  
Cristian Leoștean ◽  
...  

The in vivo distribution of 50 nm clusters of polyethylene glycol-conjugated superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs-PEG) was conducted in this study. SPIONs-PEG were synthesized de novo, and their structure and paramagnetic behaviors were analyzed by specific methods (TEM, DLS, XRD, VSM). Wistar rats were treated with 10 mg Fe/kg body weight SPIONs-PEG and their organs and blood were examined at two intervals for short-term (15, 30, 60, 180 min) and long-term (6, 12, 24 h) exposure evaluation. Most exposed organs were investigated through light and transmission electron microscopy, and blood and urine samples were examined through fluorescence spectrophotometry. SPIONs-PEG clusters entered the bloodstream after intraperitoneal and intravenous administrations and ended up in the urine, with the highest clearance at 12 h. The skin and spleen were within normal histological parameters, while the liver, kidney, brain, and lungs showed signs of transient local anoxia or other transient pathological affections. This study shows that once internalized, the synthesized SPIONs-PEG disperse well through the bloodstream with minor to nil induced tissue damage, are biocompatible, have good clearance, and are suited for biomedical applications.


Author(s):  
George Crossley ◽  
Prashanthan Sanders ◽  
Paolo De Filippo ◽  
Khaldoun Tarakji ◽  
Bert Hansky ◽  
...  

Background: Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICD) are indicated for primary and secondary prevention of sudden cardiac arrest. Despite enhancements in design and technologies, the ICD lead is the most vulnerable component of the ICD system and failure of ICD leads remains a significant clinical problem. A novel, small diameter, lumenless, catheter delivered, defibrillator lead was developed with the aim to improve long term reliability. Methods and Results: The Lead Evaluation for Defibrillation and Reliability (LEADR) study is a multi-center, single-arm, Bayesian, adaptive design, pre-market interventional pivotal clinical study. Up to 60 study sites from around the world will participate in the study. Patients indicated for a de novo ICD will undergo defibrillation testing at implantation and clinical assessments at baseline, implant, pre-hospital discharge, 3 months, 6 months, and every 6 months thereafter until official study closure. Patients will participate for a minimum of 18 months to approximately 3 years. Fracture-free survival will be evaluated using a Bayesian statistical method that incorporates both virtual patient data (combination of bench testing to failure with in-vivo use condition data) with clinical patients. The clinical subject sample size will be determined using decision rules for number of subject enrollments and follow-up time based upon the observed number of fractures at certain time points in the study. The adaptive study design will therefore result in a minimum of 500 and a maximum of 900 patients enrolled. Conclusion: The LEADR Clinical Study was designed to efficiently provide evidence for short- and long-term safety and efficacy of a novel lead design using Bayesian methods including a novel virtual patient approach.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 3348-3348
Author(s):  
Fabiola V. Merriam ◽  
Suzan Imren ◽  
Robert A Landeros ◽  
Colleen Delaney

Abstract Cord blood transplant (CBT) recipients are known to be at risk for delayed engraftment, resulting in an increased risk of morbidity and mortality post transplant. To overcome delayed engraftment, several groups have developed methods to expand ex vivo cord blood stem/progenitor cells (HSPC) which are under clinical evaluation. The majority of these expansion methods require identification of a patient specific cord blood donor as the source material for expansion, resulting in delays in the time to transplant and inherently carry a risk of product failure. In contrast, we have developed an off-the-shelf, universal donor ex vivo expanded cord blood (CB) derived HSPC product intended for use as a transient graft source which has been demonstrated to significantly reduce the incidence of documented bacterial infections in both transplant and non-transplant settings.1,2 Donor chimerism studies conducted weekly in the first month post transplant confirm that the initial early (days 0-14) myelomonocytic engraftment is derived largely from our universal donor graft. Herein, we now demonstrate that the these rapidly engrafting myelomonocytic cells generated from the universal donor graft source are mature and functionally intact human myeloid cells that can fight infectious organisms. CBT recipients enrolled on a phase II myeloablative CBT trial were included in these ancillary studies in which we evaluated the functional capacity of newly generated myeloid cells in peripheral blood. A flow cytometry-based assay which allowed quantitation of both phagocytosis and O2-dependent killing (oxidative burst) in myeloid cells was used. Strikingly, both monocytes (CD14+) and granulocytes (CD15+) in patients' blood displayed similar frequencies of phagocytosis and O2-dependent killing of Staphlococcus aureus at day 7 (90.3%±2.2% phagocytosis and 88.9±5.2% O2-dependent killing n=2) when more than 95% of myeloid cells were from the expanded cell product compared to day 14 (69±13.2% phagocytosis and 94±2% O2-dependent killing, n=2) when more than 99% of cells were from a non-manipulated CB unit as a result of immunologic rejection by the T cell replete CB unit. These findings provide strong evidence that de novo generated myeloid cells from expanded HSPCs are as functionally competent as myeloid cells de novo generated from non-expanded CB. To better study the functionional properties of myeloid cells derived in vivo from rapidly repopulating expanded CB HSPCs, we transplanted either 20,000 non-expanded (NE-HSPC) CD34+ CB cells or their expanded progeny (E-HSPC) into sub-lethally irradiated NOD-scid IL2rγnull (NSG) mice. At day 7 after transplantation mice transplanted with E-HSPC showed 40-fold higher human engraftment in the bone marrow than mice transplanted with NE-HSPC (28.3 ± 1% vs 0.7±0.1%, n=3, p<0.001). Remarkably, the monocytes and granulocytes from their bone marrow showed a similar phagocytic potential to that of the monocytes and granulocytes of mice receiving NE-HSPC (60.4±3.2% vs 69.6±3.2%, n=3, p=0.06). Moreover, the frequency of phagocytosis in the myeloid cells isolated from the lungs of mice receiving E-HSPC was 7-fold higher than in the lungs of mice receiving NE-HSPC. It has been well documented that E-HSPC when infused alone, also contribute to long term engraftment in NSG mice, and therefore at 22 weeks after transplantation, the frequency of phagocytosis in monocytes and granulocytes isolated from the bone marrow of mice receiving E-HSPC remained similar to that in the bone marrow of mice receiving NE-HSPC for Staphlococcus aureus (55.1 ±1.9% vs 43.8%±7%, n=5, p=0.15), Escherichia coli (50.8±2% vs 49 ±8.3%, n=5, p=0.83) and Zymosan (43.7%±3 vs 49.9%±9.2%, n=5, p=0.54) indicating the continued generation of functional myeloid cells from long term repopulating cells. We demonstrate for the first time that ex vivo expanded CB HSPCs rapidly give rise to functional myelomonocytic cells in vivo in patients and immunodeficient mice. This study validates that our universal donor off-the-shelf, expanded CB HSPC cell product is a valuable resource for patients undergoing myeloablative CBT, and further warrants its widespread use in a non-transplant setting as a supportive "myeloid bridge" to mitigate treatment-related morbidity and mortality. 1. Delaney C. et al. Lancet Haematol. 2016 Jul;3(7):e330-9 2. Summers C. et al. Blood 2014 124:3860 Disclosures Delaney: Nohla Therapeutics: Employment.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. e000129
Author(s):  
Caio Abner Leite ◽  
Jose Mauricio Mota ◽  
Kalil Alves de Lima ◽  
Carlos Wagner Wanderley ◽  
Leticia Almeida Nascimento ◽  
...  

BackgroundPrevious data have reported that the growth of established tumors may be facilitated by postsepsis disorder through changes in the microenvironment and immune dysfunction. However, the influence of postsepsis disorder in initial carcinogenesis remains elusive.MethodsIn the present work, the effect of postsepsis on inflammation-induced early carcinogenesis was evaluated in an experimental model of colitis-associated colorectal cancer (CAC). We also analyzed the frequency and role of intestinal T regulatory cells (Treg) in CAC carcinogenesis.ResultsThe colitis grade and the tumor development rate were evaluated postmortem or in vivo through serial colonoscopies. Sepsis-surviving mice (SSM) presented with a lower colonic DNA damage, polyp incidence, reduced tumor load, and milder colitis than their sham-operated counterparts. Ablating Treg led to restoration of the ability to develop colitis and tumor polyps in the SSM, in a similar fashion to that in the sham-operated mice. On the other hand, the growth of subcutaneously inoculated MC38luc colorectal cancer cells or previously established chemical CAC tumors was increased in SSM.ConclusionOur results provide evidence that postsepsis disorder has a dual effect in cancer development, inhibiting inflammation-induced early carcinogenesis in a Treg-dependent manner, while increasing the growth of previously established tumors.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Outi M. Villet ◽  
Antti Siltanen ◽  
Tommi Pätilä ◽  
M. Ali A. Mahar ◽  
Antti Vento ◽  
...  

The overall objective of cell transplantation is to repopulate postinfarction scar with contractile cells, thus improving systolic function, and to prevent or to regress the remodeling process. Direct implantation of isolated myoblasts, cardiomyocytes, and bone-marrow-derived cells has shown prospect for improved cardiac performance in several animal models and patients suffering from heart failure. However, direct implantation of cultured cells can lead to major cell loss by leakage and cell death, inappropriate integration and proliferation, and cardiac arrhythmia. To resolve these problems an approach using 3-dimensional tissue-engineered cell constructs has been investigated. Cell engineering technology has enabled scaffold-free sheet development including generation of communication between cell graft and host tissue, creation of organized microvascular network, and relatively long-term survival afterin vivotransplantation.


Blood ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 84 (2) ◽  
pp. 408-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
CL Li ◽  
GR Johnson

The effects of stem cell factor (SCF) have been tested on a murine bone marrow subpopulation (RH123lo, Lin-, Ly6A/E+) that is highly enriched for long-term hematopoietic repopulating cells. SCF maintained cells from this population with long-term repopulating ability for up to 10 days in vitro. However, compared with freshly isolated cells, the level of engraftment in vivo by the cultured cells declined during the in vitro culture period, suggesting that SCF alone was unable to stimulate the self-renewal of long-term repopulating cells. By direct visualization of cultures, only small numbers of cells survived and rarely underwent cell division. However, SCF did directly stimulate proliferation of a population (Rh123med/hi,Lin-,Ly6A/E+) enriched for short-term repopulating cells. These data suggest that stem cell differentiation is associated with the development of mitogenic activity by SCF at least in some progenitor cell populations.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yusheng Liu ◽  
Yiwei Zhang ◽  
Hu Nie ◽  
Falong Lu ◽  
Jiaqiang Wang

Traditional mRNA degradation rate measurements involves complex experimental design with RNA labeling or transcription blocking together with sampling at multiple timepoints. These experimental requirements limit the application of transcriptome-wide mRNA degradation rate analysis mainly in cultured cells, but rarely in in vivo samples. Therefore, a direct and simple strategy needs to be developed to study mRNA degradation rate. Here, we defined mRNA degradation intermediates as transcripts where decay is about to occur or has partially occurred in the 3′-untranslated regions after poly(A) tail deadenylation, and found that the proportion of mRNA degradation intermediates is a very simple and convenient indicator for evaluating the degradation rate of mRNA in mouse and human cell lines. In addition, we showed that a higher proportion of mRNA degradation intermediates is correlated with faster cell cycle and higher turnover rate of mouse tissues. Further, we validated that in mouse maturing oocytes where transcription is silent, the proportion of mRNA degradation intermediates is positively correlated with the mRNA degradation rate. Together, these results demonstrate that degradation intermediates can function as a good indicator of mRNA, cell, and tissue metabolism, and can be easily assayed by total RNA 3′-end sequencing from a single bulk cell sample without the need for drug treatment or multi-timepoint sampling. This finding is of great potential for studies on mRNA degradation rate at the molecular, cellular, or organic level, including samples or systems that cannot be assayed with previous methods. In addition, further application of the findings into single cells will likely greatly aid the identification and study of rare cells with unique cellular metabolism dynamics such as tissue stem cells and tumor cells.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document