Cells (Mar 2023)

Development and In Vitro/In Vivo Comparative Characterization of Cryopreserved and Decellularized Tracheal Grafts

  • Elena Stocco,
  • Silvia Barbon,
  • Marco Mammana,
  • Diletta Trojan,
  • Alice Bianchin,
  • Francesca Favaretto,
  • Martina Contran,
  • Giovanni Zambello,
  • Andrea Vogliardi,
  • Marta Confalonieri,
  • Silvia Todros,
  • Piero G. Pavan,
  • Filippo Romanato,
  • Maria Teresa Conconi,
  • Veronica Macchi,
  • Raffaele De Caro,
  • Federico Rea,
  • Andrea Porzionato

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells12060888
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. 888

Abstract

Read online

Tracheal reconstruction represents a challenge when primary anastomosis is not feasible. Within this scenario, the study aim was to develop a new pig-derived decellularized trachea (DecellT) to be compared with the cryopreserved counterpart (CryoT) for a close predictive analysis. Tracheal segments underwent decellularization by a physical + enzymatic + chemical method (12 cycles); in parallel, cryopreserved samples were also prepared. Once decellularized (histology/DNA quantification), the two groups were characterized for Alpha-Gal epitopes/structural proteins (immunohistochemistry/histology/biochemical assays/second harmonic generation microscopy)/ultrastructure (Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM))/mechanical behaviour. Cytotoxicity absence was assessed in vitro (extract-test assay/direct seeding, HM1SV40 cell line) while biocompatibility was verified in BALB/c mice, followed by histological/immunohistochemical analyses and SEM (14 days). Decellularization effectively removed Alpha-Gal epitopes; cartilage histoarchitecture was retained in both groups, showing chondrocytes only in the CryoT. Cryopreservation maintained few respiratory epithelium sparse cilia, not detectable in DecellT. Focusing on ECM, preserved structural/ultrastructural organization and collagen content were observed in the cartilage of both; conversely, the GAGs were significantly reduced in DecellT, as confirmed by mechanical study results. No cytotoxicity was highlighted by CryoT/DecellT in vitro, as they were also corroborated by a biocompatibility assay. Despite some limitations (cells presence/GAGs reduction), CryoT/DecellT are both appealing options, which warrant further investigation in comparative in vivo studies.

Keywords