Reconstruction of the lymphatic system by transplantation of a centrifuge-based bioengineered lymphatic tissue
Shu Obana, Shoko Itakura, Mutsunori Murahashi, Makiya Nishikawa, Kosuke Kusamori

TL;DR
Scientists created bioengineered lymphatic tissues that can regenerate lymph node-like structures and reduce swelling in mice with lymphedema.
Contribution
The novel contribution is the development of centrifuge-based bioengineered lymphatic tissues that reconstruct functional lymph nodes.
Findings
Centrifuge-based bioengineered tissues with lymphatic endothelial cells and MSCs survive long after transplantation.
Transplanted tissues form lymph node-like structures and suppress lymphedema in mice for 100 days.
The lymph node-like structures generate immune responses to CpG1018, indicating functional immune activity.
Abstract
The increase in cancer incidence has accelerated the need for secondary lymphedema treatments after lymphadenectomy (LD) because lymph nodes cannot be regenerated. We demonstrate that bioengineered tissues with a lymphatic network containing lymphatic endothelial cells and mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) fabricated by a centrifugal cell stacking technique effectively treat secondary lymphedema. Centrifuge-based bioengineered lymphatic tissues (CeLyTs) with MSCs outside the tissue, prepared using mouse or human cells, survive long after transplantation and restore lymphatic flow in LD mice. CeLyTs transplanted into LD mice form a lymph node-like structure and suppress lymphedema in LD mice for 100 days post-transplantation, in contrast to conventional standard treatments including compression therapy. Lymph node-like structures composed of transplant- and host-derived cells,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLymphatic System and Diseases · Lymphatic Disorders and Treatments · Vascular Malformations and Hemangiomas
