Bethesda, MD—
By
now, most people have read stories about how “grow your
own organs” using stem cells is just a breakthrough away.
Despite the hype, this breakthrough has been elusive. A new report
published in the March 2009 issue of The FASEB Journal (http://www.fasebj.org)
brings bioengineered organs a step closer, as scientists from Stanford
and New York University Langone Medical Center describe how they were
able to use a “scaffolding” material extracted from
the groin area of mice on which stem cells from blood, fat, and bone
marrow grew. This advance clears two major hurdles to bioengineered
replacement organs, namely a matrix on which stem cells can form a
3-dimensional organ and transplant rejection.
“The ability to provide stem cells with a scaffold to grow
and differentiate into mature cells could revolutionize the field of
organ transplantation,” said Geoffrey Gurtner, M.D.,
Associate Professor of Surgery at Stanford University and a senior
researcher involved in the work.
To make this advance, Gurtner and colleagues first had to demonstrate
that expendable pieces of tissue (called “free
flaps”) could be sustained in the laboratory. To do
this, they harvested a piece of tissue containing blood vessels, fat,
and skin from the groin area of rats and used a bioreactor to provide
nutrients and oxygen to keep it alive. Then, they seeded the extracted
tissue with stem cells before it was implanted back into the animal.
Once the tissue was back in the mice, the stem cells continued to grow
on their own and the implant was not rejected. This suggests that if
the stem cells had been coaxed into becoming an organ, the organ would
have “taken hold” in the animal’s body.
In addition to engineering the stem cells to form a specific organ
around the extracted tissue, they also could be engineered to express
specific proteins which allows for even greater potential uses of this
technology.
“Myth has its lures, but so does modern science. The notion
of using one tissue as the scaffold for another is as old as the Birth
of Venus to the Book of Genesis,” said Gerald Weissmann,
M.D., Editor-in-Chief of The
FASEB Journal. “Eve may or may not have been
formed from Adam’s rib, but these experiments show exactly
how stem cell techniques can be used to turn one’s own tissue
into newly-formed, architecturally-sound organs.”
The FASEB Journal
(http://www.fasebj.org)
is published by the Federation of the American Societies for
Experimental Biology (FASEB) and is the most cited journal worldwide
according to the Institute for Scientific Information. FASEB
comprises 22 nonprofit societies with more than 80,000 members, making
it the largest coalition of biomedical research associations in the
United States. FASEB advances biological science through
collaborative advocacy for research policies that promote scientific
progress and education and lead to improvements in human health.
###
Research Report Details: Edward I. Chang, Robert G.
Bonillas, Samyra El-ftesi, Eric I. Chang, Daniel J. Ceradini, Ivan N.
Vial, Denise A. Chan, Joseph Michaels, V, and Geoffrey C. Gurtner.
Tissue engineering using autologous microcirculatory beds as
vascularized bioscaffolds. FASEB J. 2009 23: 906-915.
http://www.fasebj.org/cgi/content/abstract/23/3/906