Detail publikačního výsledku
Robust acute myeloid leukemia engraftment in humanized scaffolds using injectable biomaterials and intravenous xenotransplantation
BUŠA, D.; HERŮDKOVÁ, Z.; HÝL, J.; VLAŽNÝ, J.; SOKOL, F.; MATULOVÁ, K.; FOLTA, A.; HYNŠT, J.; VOJTOVÁ, L.; KŘEN, L.; REPKO, M.; RÁČIL, Z.; MAYER, J.; ČULEN, M.
Originální název
Robust acute myeloid leukemia engraftment in humanized scaffolds using injectable biomaterials and intravenous xenotransplantation
Anglický název
Robust acute myeloid leukemia engraftment in humanized scaffolds using injectable biomaterials and intravenous xenotransplantation
Druh
Článek WoS
Originální abstrakt
Patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) can be improved by implantation of a humanized niche. Nevertheless, the overall complexity of the current protocols, as well as the use of specific biomaterials and procedures, limits the wider adoption of this approach. Here, we identify the essential minimum steps required to create the humanized scaffolds and achieve successful acute myeloid leukemia (AML) engraftment. We compared seven biomaterials, which included both published and custom-designed materials. The highest level of bone marrow niche was achieved with extracellular matrix gels and custom collagen fiber, both of which allowed for a simple non-surgical implantation. The biomaterial selection did not influence the following AML infiltration. Regarding xenotransplantation, standard intravenous administration produced the most robust engraftment, even for two out of four otherwise non-engrafting AML samples. In contrast, direct intra-scaffold xenotransplantation did not offer any advantage. In summary, we demonstrate that the combination of an injectable biomaterial for scaffold creation plus an intravenous route for AML xenotransplantation provide the most convenient and robust approach to produce AML PDX using a humanized niche.
Anglický abstrakt
Patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) can be improved by implantation of a humanized niche. Nevertheless, the overall complexity of the current protocols, as well as the use of specific biomaterials and procedures, limits the wider adoption of this approach. Here, we identify the essential minimum steps required to create the humanized scaffolds and achieve successful acute myeloid leukemia (AML) engraftment. We compared seven biomaterials, which included both published and custom-designed materials. The highest level of bone marrow niche was achieved with extracellular matrix gels and custom collagen fiber, both of which allowed for a simple non-surgical implantation. The biomaterial selection did not influence the following AML infiltration. Regarding xenotransplantation, standard intravenous administration produced the most robust engraftment, even for two out of four otherwise non-engrafting AML samples. In contrast, direct intra-scaffold xenotransplantation did not offer any advantage. In summary, we demonstrate that the combination of an injectable biomaterial for scaffold creation plus an intravenous route for AML xenotransplantation provide the most convenient and robust approach to produce AML PDX using a humanized niche.
Klíčová slova
AML; collagen; mouse model; ossicles; patient-derived xenografts; T-cell
Klíčová slova v angličtině
AML; collagen; mouse model; ossicles; patient-derived xenografts; T-cell
Autoři
BUŠA, D.; HERŮDKOVÁ, Z.; HÝL, J.; VLAŽNÝ, J.; SOKOL, F.; MATULOVÁ, K.; FOLTA, A.; HYNŠT, J.; VOJTOVÁ, L.; KŘEN, L.; REPKO, M.; RÁČIL, Z.; MAYER, J.; ČULEN, M.
Vydáno
22.05.2025
Periodikum
Molecular Oncology
Svazek
Early View
Číslo
1/2025
Stát
Spojené království Velké Británie a Severního Irska
Strany od
1
Strany do
15
Strany počet
15
URL
Plný text v Digitální knihovně
BibTex
@article{BUT197008,
author="Daniel {Buša} and Zdenka {Herůdková} and Jan {Hýl} and Jakub {Vlažný} and Filip {Sokol} and Květoslava {Matulová} and Adam {Folta} and Jakub {Hynšt} and Lucy {Vojtová} and Leoš {Křen} and Martin {Repko} and Zdeněk {Ráčil} and Jiří {Mayer} and Martin {Čulen}",
title="Robust acute myeloid leukemia engraftment in humanized scaffolds using injectable biomaterials and intravenous xenotransplantation",
journal="Molecular Oncology",
year="2025",
volume="Early View",
number="1/2025",
pages="1--15",
doi="10.1002/1878-0261.13790",
issn="1574-7891",
url="https://febs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/1878-0261.13790"
}Dokumenty