Abstract

Liver tissue engineering offers a promising strategy for liver failure patients. Since transplantation rejection resulting in vessel thrombosis is regarded as a major hurdle, vascular reconstruction is one of indispensable requirements of whole organ engineering. Here we demonstrated a novel strategy for reconstruction of a vascularized bioengineered human liver (VBHL) using decellularized liver scaffolds in an efficient manner. First we achieved fully functional endothelial coverage of scaffolds by adopting the anti-CD31 aptamer as a potent coating agent for re-endothelialization. Through an ex vivo human blood perfusion that recapitulates the blood coagulation response in humans, we demonstrated significantly reduced platelet aggregation in anti-CD31 aptamer coated scaffolds. We then produced VBHL constructs using liver parenchymal cells and nonparenchymal cells, properly organized into liver-like structures with an aligned vasculature. Interestingly, VBHL constructs displayed prominently enhanced long-term liver-specific functions that are affected by vascular functionality. The VBHL constructs formed perfusable vessel networks in vivo as evidenced by the direct vascular connection between the VBHL constructs and the renal circulation. Furthermore, heterotopic transplantation of VBHL constructs supported liver functions in a rat model of liver fibrosis. Overall, we proposed a new strategy to generate transplantable bioengineered livers characterized by highly functional vascular reconstruction.

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