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Citations to this article

Transplanted endothelial cells repopulate the liver endothelium and correct the phenotype of hemophilia A mice
Antonia Follenzi, … , Sanj Raut, Sanjeev Gupta
Antonia Follenzi, … , Sanj Raut, Sanjeev Gupta
Published February 14, 2008
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2008;118(3):935-945. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI32748.
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Research Article Hematology Article has an altmetric score of 8

Transplanted endothelial cells repopulate the liver endothelium and correct the phenotype of hemophilia A mice

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Abstract

Transplantation of healthy cells to repair organ damage or replace deficient functions constitutes a major goal of cell therapy. However, the mechanisms by which transplanted cells engraft, proliferate, and function remain unknown. To investigate whether host liver sinusoidal endothelium could be replaced with transplanted liver sinusoidal endothelial cells, we developed an animal model of tissue replacement that utilized a genetic system to identify transplanted cells and induced host-cell perturbations to confer a proliferative advantage to transplanted cells. Under these experimental conditions, transplanted cells engrafted efficiently and proliferated to replace substantial portions of the liver endothelium. Tissue studies demonstrated that transplanted cells became integral to the liver structure and reacquired characteristic endothelial morphology. Characterization of transplanted endothelial cells by membrane markers and studies of cellular function, including synthesis and release of coagulation factor VIII, demonstrated that transplanted cells were functionally intact. Further analysis showed that repopulation of the livers of mice that model hemophilia A with healthy endothelial cells restored plasma factor VIII activity and corrected their bleeding phenotype. Our studies therefore suggest that transplantation of healthy endothelial cells should be considered for cell therapy of relevant disorders and that endothelial reconstitution with transplanted cells may offer an excellent paradigm for defining organ-specific pathophysiological mechanisms.

Authors

Antonia Follenzi, Daniel Benten, Phyllis Novikoff, Louisa Faulkner, Sanj Raut, Sanjeev Gupta

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Total citations by year

Year: 2024 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 Total
Citations: 4 4 4 6 8 4 7 5 9 4 4 6 5 2 7 7 86
Citation information
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Citations to this article in year 2016 (9)

Title and authors Publication Year
Angiocrine functions of organ-specific endothelial cells
S Rafii, JM Butler, BS Ding
Nature 2016
Kupffer Cell Transplantation in Mice for Elucidating Monocyte/Macrophage Biology and for Potential in Cell or Gene Therapy
S Merlin, KK Bhargava, G Ranaldo, D Zanolini, CJ Palestro, L Santambrogio, M Prat, A Follenzi, S Gupta
The American Journal of Pathology 2016
Potential role of a new PEGylated recombinant factor VIII for hemophilia A
T Wynn, B Gumuscu
Journal of blood medicine 2016
Immunological aspects of liver cell transplantation
F Oldhafer, M Bock, CS Falk, FW Vondran
World Journal of Transplantation 2016
Methods for Isolation and Purification of Murine Liver Sinusoidal Endothelial Cells: A Systematic Review
J Meyer, C Gonelle-Gispert, P Morel, L Bühler, A Asakura
PloS one 2016
Characterization of a Fetal Liver Cell Population Endowed with Long-Term Multiorgan Endothelial Reconstitution Potential: Long-Term Multiorgan Endothelial Reconstitution
A Cañete, V Comaills, I Prados, AM Castro, S Hammad, P Ybot-Gonzalez, E Bockamp, JG Hengstler, B Gottgens, MJ Sánchez
Stem Cells 2016
Implantation of healthy matrix-embedded endothelial cells rescues dysfunctional endothelium and ischaemic tissue in liver engraftment
P Melgar-Lesmes, M Balcells, ER Edelman
Gut 2016
Novel factor VIII variants with a modified furin cleavage site improve the efficacy of gene therapy for hemophilia A
GN Nguyen, LA George, JI Siner, RJ Davidson, CB Zander, XL Zheng, VR Arruda, RM Camire, DE Sabatino
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis 2016
Metabolic reprogramming identifies the most aggressive lesions at early phases of hepatic carcinogenesis
MA Kowalik, G Guzzo, A Morandi, A Perra, S Menegon, I Masgras, E Trevisan, MM Angioni, F Fornari, L Quagliata, GM Ledda-Columbano, L Gramantieri, L Terracciano, S Giordano, P Chiarugi, A Rasola, A Columbano
Oncotarget 2016

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