Transplantation of human stem cell-derived hepatocytes in an animal model of acute liver failure.

Ramanathan, Rajesh, Giuseppe Pettinato, John T Beeston, David D Lee, Xuejun Wen, Martin J Mangino, and Robert A Fisher. 2015. “Transplantation of Human Stem Cell-Derived Hepatocytes in an Animal Model of Acute Liver Failure.”. Surgery 158 (2): 349-59.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Hepatocyte cell transplantation can be life-saving in patients with acute liver failure (ALF); however, primary human hepatocyte transplantation is limited by the scarcity of donor hepatocytes. We investigated the effect of stem cell-derived, hepatocyte-like cells in an animal xenotransplant model of ALF.

METHODS: Intraperitoneal d-galactosamine was used to develop a lethal model of ALF in the rat. Human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC), human mesenchymal stem cells, and human iPSC combined with human endothelial cells (iPSC + EC) were differentiated into hepatocyte-like cells and transplanted into the spleens of athymic nude rats with ALF.

RESULTS: A reproducible lethal model of ALF was achieved with nearly 90% death within 3 days. Compared with negative controls, rats transplanted with stem cell-derived, hepatocyte-like cells were associated with increased survival. Human albumin was detected in the rat serum 3 days after transplantation in more than one-half the animals transplanted with hepatocyte-like cells. Only animals transplanted with iPSC + EC-derived hepatocytes had serum human albumin at 14 days posttransplant. Transplanted hepatocyte-like cells homed to the injured rat liver, whereas the ECs were only detected in the spleen.

CONCLUSION: Transplantation of stem cell-derived, hepatocyte-like cells improved survival with evidence of in vivo human albumin production. Combining ECs may prolong cell function after transplantation.

Last updated on 06/11/2025
PubMed

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