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1.
ACS Sens ; 9(1): 262-271, 2024 01 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38190731

ABSTRACT

Iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) have wide utility in applications from drug delivery to the rewarming of cryopreserved tissues. Due to the complex behavior of IONPs (e.g., uneven particle distribution and aggregation), further developments and clinical translation can be accelerated by having access to a noninvasive method for tissue IONP quantification. Currently, there is no low-cost method to nondestructively track IONPs in tissues across a wide range of concentrations. This work describes the performance of a low-cost, tabletop, longitudinally detected electron paramagnetic resonance (LOD-EPR) system to address this issue in the field of cryopreservation, which utilizes IONPs for rewarming of rat kidneys. A low-cost LOD-EPR system is realized via simultaneous transmit and receive using MHz continuous-wave transverse excitation with kHz modulation, which is longitudinally detected at the modulation frequency to provide both geometric and frequency isolation. The accuracy of LOD-EPR for IONP quantification is compared with NMR relaxometry. Solution measurements show excellent linearity (R2 > 0.99) versus Fe concentration for both measurements on EMG308 (a commercial nanoparticle), silica-coated EMG308, and PEG-coated EMG308 in water. The LOD-EPR signal intensity and NMR longitudinal relaxation rate constant (R1) of water are affected by particle coating, solution viscosity, and particle aggregation. R1 remains linear but with a reduced slope when in cryoprotective agent (CPA) solution, whereas the LOD-EPR signal is relatively insensitive to this. R1 does not correlate well with Fe concentration in rat kidney sections (R2 = 0.3487), while LOD-EPR does (R2 = 0.8276), with a linear regression closely matching that observed in solution and CPA.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Water , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Magnetic Iron Oxide Nanoparticles
2.
Cryobiology ; 114: 104842, 2024 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38158172

ABSTRACT

In clinical practice, donor hearts are transported on ice prior to transplant and discarded if cold ischemia time exceeds ∼5 h. Methods to extend these preservation times are critically needed, and ideally, this storage time would extend indefinitely, enabling improved donor-to-patient matching, organ utilization, and immune tolerance induction protocols. Previously, we demonstrated successful vitrification and rewarming of whole rat hearts without ice formation by perfusion-loading a cryoprotective agent (CPA) solution prior to vitrification. However, these hearts did not recover any beating even in controls with CPA loading/unloading alone, which points to the chemical toxicity of the cryoprotective solution (VS55 in Euro-Collins carrier solution) as the likely culprit. To address this, we compared the toxicity of another established CPA cocktail (VEG) to VS55 using ex situ rat heart perfusion. The CPA exposure time was 150 min, and the normothermic assessment time was 60 min. Using Celsior as the carrier, we observed partial recovery of function (atria-only beating) for both VS55 and VEG. Upon further analysis, we found that the VEG CPA cocktail resulted in 50 % lower LDH release than VS55 (N = 4, p = 0.017), suggesting VEG has lower toxicity than VS55. Celsior was a better carrier solution than alternatives such as UW, as CPA + Celsior-treated hearts spent less time in cardiac arrest (N = 4, p = 0.029). While we showed substantial improvement in cardiac function after exposure to vitrifiable concentrations of CPA by improving both the CPA and carrier solution formulation, further improvements will be required before we achieve healthy cryopreserved organs for transplant.


Subject(s)
Heart Transplantation , Organ Preservation Solutions , Animals , Rats , Cryopreservation/methods , Cryoprotective Agents/toxicity , Heart Transplantation/methods , Ice , Organ Preservation Solutions/pharmacology , Tissue Donors
3.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 3407, 2023 06 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37296144

ABSTRACT

Banking cryopreserved organs could transform transplantation into a planned procedure that more equitably reaches patients regardless of geographical and time constraints. Previous organ cryopreservation attempts have failed primarily due to ice formation, but a promising alternative is vitrification, or the rapid cooling of organs to a stable, ice-free, glass-like state. However, rewarming of vitrified organs can similarly fail due to ice crystallization if rewarming is too slow or cracking from thermal stress if rewarming is not uniform. Here we use "nanowarming," which employs alternating magnetic fields to heat nanoparticles within the organ vasculature, to achieve both rapid and uniform warming, after which the nanoparticles are removed by perfusion. We show that vitrified kidneys can be cryogenically stored (up to 100 days) and successfully recovered by nanowarming to allow transplantation and restore life-sustaining full renal function in nephrectomized recipients in a male rat model. Scaling this technology may one day enable organ banking for improved transplantation.


Subject(s)
Kidney Transplantation , Vitrification , Male , Rats , Animals , Cryopreservation/methods , Kidney , Organ Preservation/methods
4.
Ann Biomed Eng ; 51(10): 2216-2228, 2023 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37351756

ABSTRACT

Vitrification could enable long-term organ preservation, but only after loading high-concentration, potentially toxic cryoprotective agents (CPAs) by perfusion. In this paper, we combine a two-compartment Krogh cylinder model with a toxicity cost function to theoretically optimize the loading of CPA (VMP) in rat kidneys as a model system. First, based on kidney perfusion experiments, we systematically derived the parameters for a CPA transport loading model, including the following: Vb = 86.0% (ra = 3.86 µm), Lp = 1.5 × 10-14 m3/(N·s), ω = 7.0 × 10-13 mol/(N·s), σ = 0.10. Next, we measured the toxicity cost function model parameters as α = 3.12 and ß = 9.39 × 10-6. Combining these models, we developed an improved kidney-loading protocol predicted to achieve vitrification while minimizing toxicity. The optimized protocol resulted in shorter exposure (25 min or 18.5% less) than the gold standard kidney-loading protocol for VMP, which had been developed based on decades of empirical practice. After testing both protocols on rat kidneys, we found comparable physical and biological outcomes. While we did not dramatically reduce toxicity, we did reduce the time. As our approach is now validated, it can be used on other organs lacking defined toxicity data to reduce CPA exposure time and provide a rapid path toward developing CPA perfusion protocols for other organs and CPAs.


Subject(s)
Cryopreservation , Vitrification , Rats , Animals , Cryopreservation/methods , Cryoprotective Agents/pharmacology , Organ Preservation , Perfusion
6.
Ann Biomed Eng ; 51(3): 566-577, 2023 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36183025

ABSTRACT

Liver cryopreservation has the potential to enable indefinite organ banking. This study investigated vitrification-the ice-free cryopreservation of livers in a glass-like state-as a promising alternative to conventional cryopreservation, which uniformly fails due to damage from ice formation or cracking. Our unique "nanowarming" technology, which involves perfusing biospecimens with cryoprotective agents (CPAs) and silica-coated iron oxide nanoparticles (sIONPs) and then, after vitrification, exciting the nanoparticles via radiofrequency waves, enables rewarming of vitrified specimens fast enough to avoid ice formation and uniformly enough to prevent cracking from thermal stresses, thereby addressing the two main failures of conventional cryopreservation. This study demonstrates the ability to load rat livers with both CPA and sIONPs by vascular perfusion, cool them rapidly to an ice-free vitrified state, and rapidly and homogenously rewarm them. While there was some elevation of liver enzymes (Alanine Aminotransferase) and impaired indocyanine green (ICG) excretion, the nanowarmed livers were viable, maintained normal tissue architecture, had preserved vascular endothelium, and demonstrated hepatocyte and organ-level function, including production of bile and hepatocyte uptake of ICG during normothermic reperfusion. These findings suggest that cryopreservation of whole livers via vitrification and nanowarming has the potential to achieve organ banking for transplant and other biomedical applications.


Subject(s)
Cryopreservation , Vitrification , Rats , Cryoprotective Agents , Hepatocytes , Liver , Animals
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