OKANO Teruo
   Department   Research Institutes and Facilities, Research Institutes and Facilities
   Position  
Article types Original article
Language English
Peer review Peer reviewed
Title Transplanted fibroblast cell sheets promote migration of hepatic progenitor cells in the incised host liver in allogeneic rat model.
Journal Formal name:Journal of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine
Abbreviation:J Tissue Eng Regen Med
ISSN code:(1932-7005)1932-6254(Linking)
Domestic / ForeginForegin
Volume, Issue, Page 9(11),pp.E108-15
Author and coauthor Muraoka Izumi†, Takatsuki Mitsuhisa, Sakai Yusuke, Tomonaga Tetsuo, Soyama Akihiko, Hidaka Masaaki, Hishikawa Yoshitaka, Koji Takehiko, Utoh Rie, Ohashi Kazuo, Okano Teruo, Kanematsu Takashi, Eguchi Susumu
Publication date 2015/11
Summary Cell sheet engineering has been noted as a new and valuable approach in the tissue-engineering field. The objective of this study was to explore a procedure to induce hepatic progenitor cells and biliary duct structures in the liver. Sprague-Dawley rat dermal fibroblast (DF) sheets were transplanted into the incised surface of the liver of F344 nude rats. In the control group, an incision was made without transplantation of the DF sheets. Bile duct (BD)-like structures and immature hepatocyte-like cells were observed in the DF sheet transplant sites. These BD-like structures were cytokeratin-8-positive, while the hepatocyte-like cells were both OV-6-positive and α-fetoprotein-positive as well. The proliferation and differentiation of liver progenitor cells were not influenced by hepatectomy. We also transplanted DF sheets transfected with a plasmid encoding the enhanced yellow fluorescent protein target to mitochondria (pEYFP-Mito) by electroporation, and found that the new structures were pEYFP-Mito-negative. We observed new BD-like structures and immature hepatocytes after transplantation of DF sheets onto incised liver surfaces, and clarified that the origin of these BD-like structures and hepatocyte-like cells was the recipient liver. The present study described an aspect of the hepatic differentiation process induced at the site of liver injury.
DOI 10.1002/term.1718
PMID 23495245