Abstract

In 2013, a clinical trial was initiated to investigate cell therapy for the treatment of corneal endothelial decompensation. Cultivating human corneal endothelial cells (CECs) while maintaining their functional phenotype is challenging; therefore, establishment of a confirmed protocol is pivotal for obtaining approval from regulatory authorities for use of cellular therapy products. In this study, we evaluated organ culture (OC) as a storage method for donor corneas used as a raw material for establishing CEC cultures. OC allows storage of corneal tissue for conventional corneal transplantation at 31-37°C for up to 5weeks, whereas storage at 4°C is limited to 2weeks. We investigated 20 pairs of corneas: one cornea of each pair was stored in OC and the other in cold storage for one week before CEC culture. In 15/20 cases, the CECs assumed a hexagonal sheet-like monolayer structure and expressed endothelial function-related markers. CECs were also obtained from OC corneas that had been stored for 1 (n = 19) and 2 (n = 7) months. As a further test, CECs were cultivated from 5 OC corneas that had been transported from France to Japan. In all cases, these corneas, even after international transport, generated CECs that formed hexagonal monolayers with clinically applicable and sufficiently high cell densities. In conclusion, the CEC cultures required for endothelial cell therapy can be obtained from OC corneas without changing the standard storage operating procedures of the eye banks.

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