Abstract

Uterine factor infertility was considered incurable until recently when we reported the first successful live birth after uterus transplantation. However, risky donor surgery and immunosuppressive therapy are factors that may be avoided with bioengineering. For example, transplanted recellularized constructs derived from decellularized tissue restored fertility in rodent models and mandate translational studies. In this study, we decellularized whole sheep uterus with three different protocols using 0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 2% sodium deoxycholate (SDC) or 2% SDC, and 1% Triton X-100. Scaffolds were then assessed for bioactivity using the dorsal root ganglion and chorioallantoic membrane assays, and we found that all the uterus scaffolds exhibited growth factor activity that promoted neurogenesis and angiogenesis. Extensive recellularization optimization was conducted using multipotent sheep fetal stem cells and we report results from the following three in vitro conditions; (a) standard cell culturing conditions, (b) constructs cultured in transwells, and (c) scaffolds preconditioned with matrix metalloproteinase 2 and 9. The recellularization efficiency was improved short-term when transwells were used compared with standard culturing conditions. However, the recellularization efficiency in scaffolds preconditioned with matrix metalloproteinases was 200–300% better than the other strategies evaluated herein, independent of decellularization protocol. Hence, a major recellularization hurdle has been overcome with the improved recellularization strategies and in vitro platforms described herein. These results are an important milestone and should facilitate the production of large bioengineered grafts suitable for future in vivo applications in the sheep, which is an essential step before considering these principles in a clinical setting.

Highlights

  • Infertility, caused by an absent or dysfunctional uterus was considered incurable until our group succeeded with the world’s first uterus transplantation that resulted in live birth[1]

  • The risks entailed by live donor surgery and the negative side-effects caused by the required immunosuppressive treatment in the allograft recipient opens up discussions for an alternative donor source

  • The significant increase in the recellularization efficiency after three days compared with recellularized with SF-SCs using standard conditions (RCSC) was 221%, 285%, and 363% for Protocol 1 (P1), protocol 2 (P2), and protocol 3 (P3), respectively (P1, p = 0.0293; P2, p = 0.0021; P3, p = 0.0002; Fig. 6J–L)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Infertility, caused by an absent or dysfunctional uterus was considered incurable until our group succeeded with the world’s first uterus transplantation that resulted in live birth[1] This procedure has been repeated at multiple centers resulting in more reported births[2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. A series of successful studies on rodents from multiple independent groups suggest that decellularized uterine tissue patches can be grafted to repair a fullthickness uterine wall injury and restore fertility[21,24,26,31]. These successful results mandate a translational evaluation using larger animal models. Tissue discs (dUTDs) displayed functional growth-promoting qualities that stimulated more axon regeneration to longer

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