scholarly journals Hormone-responsive organoids from domestic mare and endangered Przewalski’s horse endometrium

Reproduction ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 160 (6) ◽  
pp. 819-831
Author(s):  
Riley E Thompson ◽  
Aime K Johnson ◽  
Pouya Dini ◽  
Margherita Y Turco ◽  
Tulio M Prado ◽  
...  

The endometrium, the inner uterine lining, is composed of cell layers that come in direct contact with an embryo during early pregnancy and later with the fetal placenta. The endometrium is responsible for signals associated with normal reproductive cyclicity as well as maintenance of pregnancy. In the mare, functionally competent in vitro models of the endometrium have not been successful. Furthermore, the ability to study various reproductive processes in vitro may allow critical evaluation of signaling pathways involved in the reproductive diseases of animals that cannot be handled frequently, such as various wildlife species. Here we report the establishment of organoids, 3D structures, derived from fresh and frozen–thawed equine endometrium (Equus ferus caballus and E. f. przewalskii). Although organoids from domestic mares responded to exogenous hormonal stimuli, organoids from Przewalski’s horse failed to respond to exogenous hormones. The present study represents a ‘first’ for any large animal model or endangered species. These physiologically functional organoids may facilitate improved understanding of normal reproductive mechanisms, uterine pathologies, and signaling mechanisms between the conceptus and endometrium and may lead to the development of novel bioassays for drug discovery.

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. eaay0065 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ritu Raman ◽  
Tiffany Hua ◽  
Declan Gwynne ◽  
Joy Collins ◽  
Siddartha Tamang ◽  
...  

Triggerable materials capable of being degraded by selective stimuli stand to transform our capacity to precisely control biomedical device activity and performance while reducing the need for invasive interventions. Here, we describe the development of a modular and tunable light-triggerable hydrogel system capable of interfacing with implantable devices. We apply these materials to two applications in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract: a bariatric balloon and an esophageal stent. We demonstrate biocompatibility and on-demand triggering of the material in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo. Moreover, we characterize performance of the system in a porcine large animal model with an accompanying ingestible LED. Light-triggerable hydrogels have the potential to be applied broadly throughout the GI tract and other anatomic areas. By demonstrating the first use of light-degradable hydrogels in vivo, we provide biomedical engineers and clinicians with a previously unavailable, safe, dynamically deliverable, and precise tool to design dynamically actuated implantable devices.


2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 130
Author(s):  
R. Sper ◽  
S. Simpson ◽  
X. Zhang ◽  
B. Collins ◽  
J. Piedrahita

Transgenic pigs are an attractive research model in the field of translational research, regenerative medicine, and stem cell therapy due to their anatomic, genetic, and physiological similarities with humans. The development of a transgenic murine model with a fusion of green fluorescent protein (GFP) to histone 2B protein (H2B, protein of nucleosome core) resulted in an easier and more convenient method for tracking cell migration and engraftment levels after transplantation as well as a way to better understand the complexity of molecular regulation within cell cycle/division, cancer biology, and chromosome dynamics. Up to now the development of a stable transgenic large animal model expressing H2B-GFP has not been described. Our objective was to develop the first transgenic porcine H2B-GFP model via CRISPR-CAS9 mediated recombination and somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). Porcine fetal fibroblasts were cotransfected with CRISPR-CAS9 designed to target the 3′ untranslated region of ACTB locus and a targeting vector containing 1Kb homology arms to ACTB flanking an IRES-H2B-GFP transgene. Four days after transfection GFP cells were fluorescence activated cell sorted. Single cell colonies were generated and analysed by PCR, and heterozygous colonies were used as donor cells for SCNT. The custom designed CRISPR-CAS9 knockin system demonstrated a 2.4% knockin efficiency. From positive cells, 119 SCNT embryos were generated and transferred to a recipient gilt resulting in three positive founder boars (P1 generation). Boars show normal fertility (pregnancies obtained via AI of wild type sows). Generated P1 clones were viable and fertile with a transgene transmission rate of 55.8% (in concordance with Mendel’s law upon chi-square test with P = 0.05). Intranuclear H2B-GFP expression was confirmed via fluorescence microscopy on 8-day in vitro cultured SCNT blastocysts and a variety of tissues (heart, kidney, brain, bladder, skeletal muscle, stomach, skin, and so on) and primary cultured cells (chondrocytes, bone marrow derived, adipocyte derived, neural stem cells, and so on) from P1 cloned boars and F1 42-day fetuses and viable piglets. In addition, chromosome segregation could be easily identified during cell cycle division in in vitro cultured stem cells. Custom designed CRISPR-CAS 9 are able to drive homologous recombination in the ACTB locus in porcine fetal fibroblasts, allowing the generation of the first described viable H2B-GFP porcine model via SCNT. Generated clones and F1 generation expressed H2B-GFP ubiquitously, and transgene transmission rates were with concordance of Mendel’s law. This novel large animal model represents an improved platform for regenerative medicine and chromosome dynamic and cancer biology studies.


2015 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 269 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Kurome ◽  
M. Dahlhoff ◽  
S. Bultmann ◽  
S. Krebs ◽  
H. Blum ◽  
...  

Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated (Cas) technology is considered as an efficient strategy for generating gene edited large animals, such as pigs. Compared to somatic cell nuclear transfer, this new technology offers a relatively simple way to generate mutant pigs by direct injection of RNA into the cytoplasm of zygotes. Moreover, the use of in vitro produced zygotes would provide a highly effective and practical method for the production of porcine disease models for biomedical research. Here we examined the production efficiency of growth hormone receptor (GHR) mutant pigs by the combination of the CRISPR/Cas system and in vitro produced zygotes. In vitro maturation (IVM) of oocytes was performed as described previously (Kurome et al., Meth. Mol. Biol., in press). In all experiments, the same batch of frozen sperm was used. After IVM, around 20 oocytes with expanded cumulus cells were incubated with 5 × 104 spermatozoa in a 100-μL drop of porcine fertilization medium for 7 h. In vitro-produced embryos were assessed by the ratio of normal fertilization (eggs with 2 pronuclei) and blastocyst formation at Day 7. The Cas9 mRNA and a single guide RNA, recognising a short sequence of 20 base pairs in exon 3 of the GHR gene, were injected directly into the cytoplasm of the embryos 8.5 to 9.5 h after IVF. Injected embryos were transferred laparoscopically to recipient pigs, and 86.4% (57/66) of sperm-penetrated oocytes (66/96) exhibited normal fertilization. Incidence of polyspermy was relatively low (9/66, 13.6%). Developmental ability of in vitro-produced embryos to the blastocyst stage was 17.4% (24/138). In total, 426 RNA-injected embryos were transferred into 2 recipients, one of which became pregnant and gave birth to 8 piglets. All piglets were clinically healthy and developed normally. In 3 out of 8 piglets (37.5%), mutations were introduced. Next-generation sequencing revealed that all of them were mosaics: one with a single mutation (22% wild-type/78% mutant) and 2 piglets with 2 different mutations (80% wild-type/2% mutant_1/18% mutant_2 and 94% wild-type/4% mutant_1/2% mutant_2). Four out of 5 mutations caused a frameshift in the GHR gene. Our study reports for the first time generation of GHR mutant pigs by the use of the CRISPR/Cas system in in vitro-produced zygotes. Because all GHR mutant offspring were mosaic, Cas9 activation probably occurred after the 1-cell stage under our experimental conditions. The founder animal with the highest proportion of mutant GHR alleles will be used for breeding to establish a large animal model for Laron syndrome.This work is supported by the German Research Council (TR-CRC 127).


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 200-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Wechsler ◽  
Kathleen E. Meyer ◽  
S. Kaye Spratt ◽  
Judith Greengard ◽  
Yolanda Santiago ◽  
...  

Abstract Hemophilia is an attractive target for gene therapy, since activity levels as low as 1% to 2% of normal are beneficial and levels of ~5% prevent spontaneous bleeding. Our goal was to provide a single treatment that permanently enables hepatic production of therapeutic levels of hFIX activity to decrease or potentially eliminate the need for prophylactic treatment in hemophilia B patients. We performed targeted in vivo genome editing using 1) two zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) targeting intron 1 of the albumin locus, and 2) a human F9 donor template construct. The ZFNs and donor template are encoded on separate hepatotropic adeno-associated virus serotype 2/6 (AAV2/6) vectors injected intravenously, resulting in targeted insertion of a corrected copy of the hF9 gene into the albumin locus in a proportion of liver hepatocytes. The albumin locus was selected as a "safe harbor" as production of this most abundant plasma protein exceeds 10 g/day, and moderate reductions in those levels are well-tolerated. These genome edited hepatocytes produce normal hFIX in therapeutic quantities, rather than albumin, driven by the highly active albumin enhancer/promoter, to treat hemophilia B; the genetic modification is expected to be sustained even in the face of hepatocyte turnover, making this approach attractive for treating young children with hemophilia before the appearance of significant organ damage. Transformed and primary human hepatocytes transduced in vitro with AAV2/6 encoding human albumin ZFNs and a promoterless hF9 transgene were shown to secrete hFIX. Extensive molecular analyses demonstrated that this was due to targeted integration of the hF9 transgene at the albumin locus and splicing of this gene into the albumin transcript. By employing AAV2/6 delivery of murine-specific ZFNs in vivo, stable levels of hFIX were observed in blood of mice injected with the albumin ZFNs and hF9 transgene donor. C57BL/6 mice were administered vehicle (n=20) or AAV2/6 vectors (n=25) encoding mouse surrogate reagents at 1.0 x1013 vector genome (vg)/kg via tail vein injection. ELISA analysis of plasma hFIX in the treated mice showed peak levels of 50-1053 ng/mL that were sustained for the duration of the 6-month study. Analysis of FIX activity from mouse plasma confirmed bioactivity commensurate with expression levels. Next, we report the feasibility of this approach in non-human primates (NHPs), showing that a single intravenous co-infusion of AAV2/6 vectors encoding the NHP targeted albumin-specific ZFNs and a human F9 donor at 1.2x1013 vg/kg (n=5/group) resulted in >50 ng/mL (>1% of normal) in this large animal model. The use of higher AAV2/6 doses (up to 1.5x1014 vg/kg) yielded plasma hFIX levels up to 1000 ng/ml (or 20% of normal) in several animals and up to 2000 ng/ml (or 50% of normal) in a single animal, for the duration of the study (3 months). The treatment was well tolerated in mice and NHPs, with no significant toxicological findings related to AAV2/6 ZFN + donor treatment in either species at therapeutic doses. Together, these data support a clinical trial to determine if a single co-administration of ZFN and donor AAV vectors is sufficient to enable therapeutic and potentially lifelong production of the clotting factor for the treatment of Hemophilia B. Disclosures Wechsler: Sangamo BioSciences: Employment. Meyer:Sangamo Biosciences Inc: Employment. Spratt:Sangamo Biosciences Inc: Employment. Greengard:Sangamo Biosciences Inc: Employment. Santiago:Sangamo Biosciences Inc: Employment. Sproul:Sangamo Biosciences Inc: Employment. Surosky:Sangamo Biosciences Inc: Employment. Paschon:Sangamo Biosciences Inc: Employment. Dubois-Stringfellow:Sangamo Biosciences Inc: Employment. Ando:Sangamo Biosciences Inc: Employment. Nichol:Sangamo Biosciences Inc: Employment. Rebar:Sangamo BioSciences: Employment. Holmes:Sangamo BioSciences: Employment.


2014 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 218-227 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberta Targa STRAMANDINOLI-ZANICOTTI ◽  
André Lopes CARVALHO ◽  
Carmen Lúcia Kuniyoshi REBELATTO ◽  
Laurindo Moacir SASSI ◽  
Maria Fernanda TORRES ◽  
...  

Reproduction ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 155 (5) ◽  
pp. 433-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefania Muzzachi ◽  
Lorenzo Guerra ◽  
Nicola Antonio Martino ◽  
Maria Favia ◽  
Giuseppe Punzi ◽  
...  

Sperm motility, a feature essential forin vivofertilization, is influenced by intracellular pH (pHi) homeostasis. Several mechanisms are involved in pHiregulation, among which sodium–hydrogen exchangers (NHEs), a family of integral transmembrane proteins that catalyze the exchange of Na+for H+across lipid bilayers. A preliminary characterization of NHE activity and kinetic parameters, followed by analysis of the expression and localization of the protein in ram spermatozoa was performed. NHE activity showed an apparentKmfor external Na+of 17.61 mM. Immunoblotting revealed a molecular mass of 85 kDa. Immunolocalization pattern showed some species-specific aspects, such as positive labeling at the equatorial region of the sperm head. Cariporide, a selective NHE1 inhibitor, significantly reduced pHirecovery (85%). Similarly, exposure to cariporide significantly inhibited different motility parameters, including those related to sperm capacitation.In vitrofertilization (IVF) was not affected by cariporide, possibly due to the non-dramatic, although significant, drop in motility and velocity parameters or due to prolonged exposure during IVF, which may have caused progressive loss of its inhibitory effect. In conclusion, this is the first study documenting, in a large animal model (sheep) of well-known translational relevance, a direct functional role of NHE on sperm pHiand motility. The postulated specificity of cariporide toward isoform 1 of the Na+/H+exchanger seems to suggest that NHE1 may contribute to the observed effects on sperm cell functionality.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel R. Principe ◽  
Nana Haahr Overgaard ◽  
Alex J. Park ◽  
Andrew M. Diaz ◽  
Carolina Torres ◽  
...  

AbstractAlthough survival has improved in recent years, the prognosis of patients with advanced pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) remains poor. Despite substantial differences in anatomy, physiology, genetics, and metabolism, the overwhelming majority of preclinical testing relies on transgenic mice. Hence, while mice have allowed for tremendous advances in cancer biology, they have been a poor predictor of drug performance/toxicity in the clinic. Given the greater similarity of sus scrofa pigs to humans, we engineered transgenic sus scrofa expressing a LSL-KRASG12D-TP53R167H cassette. By applying Adeno-Cre to pancreatic duct cells in vitro, cells self-immortalized and established tumors in immunocompromised mice. When Adeno-Cre was administered to the main pancreaticduct in vivo, pigs developed extensive PDAC at the injection site hallmarked by excessive proliferation and desmoplastic stroma. This serves as the first large animal model of pancreatic carcinogenesis, and may allow for insight into new avenues of translational research not before possible in rodents.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 6 (11) ◽  
pp. e27452 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Ambruosi ◽  
Manuel Filioli Uranio ◽  
Anna Maria Sardanelli ◽  
Paola Pocar ◽  
Nicola Antonio Martino ◽  
...  

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