Documentdetail
ID kaart

oai:www.zora.uzh.ch:144711

Onderwerp
Clinic for Gastroenterology and He... 610 Medicine & health
Auteur
Nagy, N Marsiano, N Bruckner, R S Scharl, M Gutnick, M J Yagel, S Arciero, E Goldstein, A M Shpigel, N Y https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2560-3783
Langue
eng
Editor

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.

Categorie

Subjects = 04 Faculty of Medicine

Jaar

2018

vermelding datum

11-10-2023

Trefwoorden
novel development system study human
Metriek

Beschrijving

Background Current efforts to develop stem cell therapy as a novel treatment for neurointestinal diseases are limited by the unavailability of a model system to study cell transplantation in the human intestine.

We propose that xenograft models support enteric nervous system (ENS) development in the fetal human intestine when transplanted into mice subcutaneously or intra-abdominally.

Methods Fetal human small and large intestine were grafted onto the small intestinal mesentery and into the subcutaneous tissue of immunodeficient mice for up to 4 months.

Intestinal cytoarchitecture and ENS development were studied using immunohistochemistry.

Key Results In both abdominal and subcutaneous grafts, the intestine developed normally with formation of mature epithelial and mesenchymal layers.

The ENS was patterned in two ganglionated plexuses containing enteric neurons and glia, including cholinergic and nitrergic neuronal subtypes.

c-Kit-immunoreactive interstitial cells of Cajal were present in the gut wall.

Conclusions & Inferences Abdominal xenografts represent a novel model that supports the growth and development of fetal human intestine.

This in vivo approach will be a useful method to study maturation of the ENS, the pathophysiology of neurointestinal diseases, and the long-term survival and functional differentiation of neuronal stem cells for the treatment of enteric neuropathies.

Nagy, N,Marsiano, N,Bruckner, R S,Scharl, M,Gutnick, M J,Yagel, S,Arciero, E,Goldstein, A M,Shpigel, N Y, https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2560-3783, 2018, Xenotransplantation of human intestine into mouse abdomen or subcutaneous tissue: Novel platforms for the study of the human enteric nervous system, Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.

Document

Openen

Delen

Bron

Artikelen aanbevolen door ES/IODE AI

Batoclimab as induction and maintenance therapy in patients with myasthenia gravis: rationale and study design of a phase 3 clinical trial
gravis myasthenia study clinical phase baseline improvement mg-adl 340 week trial placebo period mg maintenance qw