Cargando…

Porcine pulmonary valve decellularization with NaOH-based vs detergent process: preliminary in vitro and in vivo assessments

BACKGROUND: Glutaraldehyde fixed xenogeneic heart valve prosthesis are hindered by calcification and lack of growth potential. The aim of tissue decellularization is to remove tissue antigenicity, avoiding the use of glutaraldehyde and improve valve integration with low inflammation and host cell re...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: van Steenberghe, Mathieu, Schubert, Thomas, Gerelli, Sébastien, Bouzin, Caroline, Guiot, Yves, Xhema, Daela, Bollen, Xavier, Abdelhamid, Karim, Gianello, Pierre
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5918872/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29695259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13019-018-0720-y
_version_ 1783317510419906560
author van Steenberghe, Mathieu
Schubert, Thomas
Gerelli, Sébastien
Bouzin, Caroline
Guiot, Yves
Xhema, Daela
Bollen, Xavier
Abdelhamid, Karim
Gianello, Pierre
author_facet van Steenberghe, Mathieu
Schubert, Thomas
Gerelli, Sébastien
Bouzin, Caroline
Guiot, Yves
Xhema, Daela
Bollen, Xavier
Abdelhamid, Karim
Gianello, Pierre
author_sort van Steenberghe, Mathieu
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Glutaraldehyde fixed xenogeneic heart valve prosthesis are hindered by calcification and lack of growth potential. The aim of tissue decellularization is to remove tissue antigenicity, avoiding the use of glutaraldehyde and improve valve integration with low inflammation and host cell recolonization. In this preliminary study, we investigated the efficacy of a NaOH-based process for decellularization and biocompatibility improvement of porcine pulmonary heart valves in comparison to a detergent-based process (SDS-SDC0, 5%). METHODS: Native cryopreserved porcine pulmonary heart valves were treated with detergent and NaOH-based processes. Decellularization was assessed by Hematoxylin and eosin/DAPI/alpha-gal/SLA-I staining and DNA quantification of native and processed leaflets, walls and muscles. Elongation stress test investigated mechanical integrity of leaflets and walls (n = 3 tests/valve component) of valves in the native and treated groups (n = 4/group). Biochemical integrity (collagen/elastin/glycosaminoglycans content) of leaflet-wall and muscle of the valves (n = 4/group) was assessed and compared between groups with trichrome staining (Sirius Red/Miller/Alcian blue). Secondly, a preliminary in vivo study assessed biocompatibility (CD3 and CD68 immunostaining) and remodeling (Hematoxylin and eosin/CD31 and ASMA immunofluorescent staining) of NaOH processed valves implanted in orthotopic position in young Landrace pigs, at 1 (n = 1) and 3 months (n = 2). RESULTS: Decellularization was better achieved with the NaOH-based process (92% vs 69% DNA reduction in the wall). Both treatments did not significantly alter mechanical properties. The detergent-based process induced a significant loss of glycosaminoglycans (p < 0,05). In vivo, explanted valves exhibited normal morphology without any sign of graft dilatation, degeneration or rejection. Low inflammation was noticed at one and three months follow-up (1,8 +/− 3,03 and 0,9836 +/− 1,3605 CD3 cells/0,12 mm(2) in the leaflets). In one animal, at three months we documented minimal calcification in the area of sinus leaflet and in one, microthrombi formation on the leaflet surface at 1 month. The endoluminal side of the valves showed partial reendothelialization. CONCLUSIONS: NaOH-based process offers better porcine pulmonary valve decellularization than the detergent process. In vivo, the NaOH processed valves showed low inflammatory response at 3 months and partial recellularization. Regarding additional property of securing, this treatment should be considered for the new generation of heart valves prosthesis. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT: Graphical abstract of the study [Image: see text]
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5918872
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-59188722018-04-30 Porcine pulmonary valve decellularization with NaOH-based vs detergent process: preliminary in vitro and in vivo assessments van Steenberghe, Mathieu Schubert, Thomas Gerelli, Sébastien Bouzin, Caroline Guiot, Yves Xhema, Daela Bollen, Xavier Abdelhamid, Karim Gianello, Pierre J Cardiothorac Surg Research Article BACKGROUND: Glutaraldehyde fixed xenogeneic heart valve prosthesis are hindered by calcification and lack of growth potential. The aim of tissue decellularization is to remove tissue antigenicity, avoiding the use of glutaraldehyde and improve valve integration with low inflammation and host cell recolonization. In this preliminary study, we investigated the efficacy of a NaOH-based process for decellularization and biocompatibility improvement of porcine pulmonary heart valves in comparison to a detergent-based process (SDS-SDC0, 5%). METHODS: Native cryopreserved porcine pulmonary heart valves were treated with detergent and NaOH-based processes. Decellularization was assessed by Hematoxylin and eosin/DAPI/alpha-gal/SLA-I staining and DNA quantification of native and processed leaflets, walls and muscles. Elongation stress test investigated mechanical integrity of leaflets and walls (n = 3 tests/valve component) of valves in the native and treated groups (n = 4/group). Biochemical integrity (collagen/elastin/glycosaminoglycans content) of leaflet-wall and muscle of the valves (n = 4/group) was assessed and compared between groups with trichrome staining (Sirius Red/Miller/Alcian blue). Secondly, a preliminary in vivo study assessed biocompatibility (CD3 and CD68 immunostaining) and remodeling (Hematoxylin and eosin/CD31 and ASMA immunofluorescent staining) of NaOH processed valves implanted in orthotopic position in young Landrace pigs, at 1 (n = 1) and 3 months (n = 2). RESULTS: Decellularization was better achieved with the NaOH-based process (92% vs 69% DNA reduction in the wall). Both treatments did not significantly alter mechanical properties. The detergent-based process induced a significant loss of glycosaminoglycans (p < 0,05). In vivo, explanted valves exhibited normal morphology without any sign of graft dilatation, degeneration or rejection. Low inflammation was noticed at one and three months follow-up (1,8 +/− 3,03 and 0,9836 +/− 1,3605 CD3 cells/0,12 mm(2) in the leaflets). In one animal, at three months we documented minimal calcification in the area of sinus leaflet and in one, microthrombi formation on the leaflet surface at 1 month. The endoluminal side of the valves showed partial reendothelialization. CONCLUSIONS: NaOH-based process offers better porcine pulmonary valve decellularization than the detergent process. In vivo, the NaOH processed valves showed low inflammatory response at 3 months and partial recellularization. Regarding additional property of securing, this treatment should be considered for the new generation of heart valves prosthesis. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT: Graphical abstract of the study [Image: see text] BioMed Central 2018-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC5918872/ /pubmed/29695259 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13019-018-0720-y Text en © The Author(s). 2018 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
van Steenberghe, Mathieu
Schubert, Thomas
Gerelli, Sébastien
Bouzin, Caroline
Guiot, Yves
Xhema, Daela
Bollen, Xavier
Abdelhamid, Karim
Gianello, Pierre
Porcine pulmonary valve decellularization with NaOH-based vs detergent process: preliminary in vitro and in vivo assessments
title Porcine pulmonary valve decellularization with NaOH-based vs detergent process: preliminary in vitro and in vivo assessments
title_full Porcine pulmonary valve decellularization with NaOH-based vs detergent process: preliminary in vitro and in vivo assessments
title_fullStr Porcine pulmonary valve decellularization with NaOH-based vs detergent process: preliminary in vitro and in vivo assessments
title_full_unstemmed Porcine pulmonary valve decellularization with NaOH-based vs detergent process: preliminary in vitro and in vivo assessments
title_short Porcine pulmonary valve decellularization with NaOH-based vs detergent process: preliminary in vitro and in vivo assessments
title_sort porcine pulmonary valve decellularization with naoh-based vs detergent process: preliminary in vitro and in vivo assessments
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5918872/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29695259
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13019-018-0720-y
work_keys_str_mv AT vansteenberghemathieu porcinepulmonaryvalvedecellularizationwithnaohbasedvsdetergentprocesspreliminaryinvitroandinvivoassessments
AT schubertthomas porcinepulmonaryvalvedecellularizationwithnaohbasedvsdetergentprocesspreliminaryinvitroandinvivoassessments
AT gerellisebastien porcinepulmonaryvalvedecellularizationwithnaohbasedvsdetergentprocesspreliminaryinvitroandinvivoassessments
AT bouzincaroline porcinepulmonaryvalvedecellularizationwithnaohbasedvsdetergentprocesspreliminaryinvitroandinvivoassessments
AT guiotyves porcinepulmonaryvalvedecellularizationwithnaohbasedvsdetergentprocesspreliminaryinvitroandinvivoassessments
AT xhemadaela porcinepulmonaryvalvedecellularizationwithnaohbasedvsdetergentprocesspreliminaryinvitroandinvivoassessments
AT bollenxavier porcinepulmonaryvalvedecellularizationwithnaohbasedvsdetergentprocesspreliminaryinvitroandinvivoassessments
AT abdelhamidkarim porcinepulmonaryvalvedecellularizationwithnaohbasedvsdetergentprocesspreliminaryinvitroandinvivoassessments
AT gianellopierre porcinepulmonaryvalvedecellularizationwithnaohbasedvsdetergentprocesspreliminaryinvitroandinvivoassessments