Yonsei Med J.  2000 Dec;41(6):814-824. 10.3349/ymj.2000.41.6.814.

Re-Engineering the liver with natural biomaterials

Affiliations
  • 1General Clinical Research Center, Department of Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461, USA. sanjvgupta@pol.net
  • 2Marion Bessin Liver Research Center, Comprehensive Cancer Research Center, General Clinical Research Center, Department of Medicine, and Department of Radiation Oncology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York.

Abstract

The extensive regenerative capacity of hepatocytes and the key roles of the liver in metabolic processes have generated interest in the liver as an appropriate target for cell and gene therapy. If cells were considered as natural biomaterials, then liver cell transplantation would fall within the general field of bioengineering. While unmodified hepatocytes engraft in the liver and ectopic sites, biological modifications and optimization of bioengineered systems would facilitate engraftment and survival of transplanted cells, especially in ectopic locations. Acute liver failure, chronic liver disease and metabolic deficiency states are among the conditions that can potentially be treated by cell transplantation. In acute liver failure, cell transplantation into the liver, along with the creation of an extrahepatic reservoir of cells might be required because engraftment and proliferation of transplanted cells in the liver needs time. In other situations, gradual liver repopulation alone might well be effective without additional manipulations.

Keyword

Liver; hepatocyte; transplantation; treatment

MeSH Terms

Animal
Biocompatible Materials*
Biomedical Engineering*
Hepatocytes/transplantation*
Human
Liver*
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