Bruinsma Bote G, Berendsen Tim A, Izamis Maria-Louisa, Yeh Heidi, Yarmush Martin L, Uygun Korkut
1] Department of Surgery, Center for Engineering in Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. [2] Department of Surgery (Surgical Laboratory), Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Surgery, Center for Engineering in Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Nat Protoc. 2015 Mar;10(3):484-94. doi: 10.1038/nprot.2015.011. Epub 2015 Feb 18.
The current standard for liver preservation involves cooling of the organ on ice (0-4 °C). Although it is successful for shorter durations, this method of preservation does not allow long-term storage of the liver. The gradual loss of hepatic viability during preservation puts pressure on organ sharing and allocation, may limit the use of suboptimal grafts and necessitates rushed transplantation to achieve desirable post-transplantation outcomes. In an attempt to improve and prolong liver viability during storage, alternative preservation methods are under investigation. For instance, ex vivo machine perfusion systems aim to sustain and even improve viability by supporting hepatic function at warm temperatures, rather than simply slowing down deterioration by cooling. Here we describe a novel subzero preservation technique that combines ex vivo machine perfusion with cryoprotectants to facilitate long-term supercooled preservation. The technique improves the preservation of rat livers to prolong storage times as much as threefold, which is validated by successful long-term recipient survival after orthotopic transplantation. This protocol describes how to load rat livers with cryoprotectants to prevent both intracellular and extracellular ice formation and to protect against hypothermic injury. Cryoprotectants are loaded ex vivo using subnormothermic machine perfusion (SNMP), after which livers can be cooled to -6 °C without freezing and kept viable for up to 96 h. Cooling to a supercooled state is controlled, followed by 3 h of SNMP recovery and orthotopic liver transplantation.
目前肝脏保存的标准方法是将器官置于冰上冷却(0-4°C)。尽管这种方法在较短时间内是成功的,但它不允许肝脏的长期保存。在保存过程中肝脏活力的逐渐丧失给器官共享和分配带来了压力,可能会限制次优移植物的使用,并且需要匆忙进行移植以实现理想的移植后结果。为了在储存期间提高和延长肝脏活力,正在研究替代的保存方法。例如,体外机器灌注系统旨在通过在温暖温度下支持肝功能来维持甚至提高活力,而不是简单地通过冷却来减缓恶化。在这里,我们描述了一种新颖的零下保存技术,该技术将体外机器灌注与冷冻保护剂相结合,以促进长期过冷保存。该技术改善了大鼠肝脏的保存,使储存时间延长了多达三倍,原位移植后受体的长期存活验证了这一点。本方案描述了如何用冷冻保护剂加载大鼠肝脏,以防止细胞内和细胞外结冰,并防止低温损伤。使用亚常温机器灌注(SNMP)在体外加载冷冻保护剂,之后肝脏可以冷却至-6°C而不结冰,并保持活力长达96小时。控制冷却至过冷状态,随后进行3小时的SNMP恢复和原位肝移植。