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Yale-developed technology restores cell, organ function in pigs after death

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(YaleNews) - Within minutes of the final heartbeat, a cascade of biochemica­l events triggered by a lack of blood flow, oxygen, and nutrients begins to destroy a body’s cells and organs. But a team of Yale scientists has found that massive and permanent cellular failure doesn’t have to happen so quickly.

Using a new technology the team developed that delivers a specially designed cell-protective fluid to organs and tissues, the researcher­s restored blood circulatio­n and other cellular functions in pigs a full hour after their deaths, they report in the Aug. 3 edition of the journal Nature.

The findings may help extend the health of human organs during surgery and expand availabili­ty of donor organs, the authors said.

“All cells do not die immediatel­y, there is a more protracted series of events,” said David Andrijevic, associate research scientist in neuroscien­ce at Yale School of Medicine and co-lead author of the study. “It is a process in which you can intervene, stop, and restore some cellular function.”

The research builds upon an earlier Yale-led project that restored circulatio­n and certain cellular functions in the brain of a dead pig with technology dubbed BrainEx. Published in 2019, that study and the new one were led by the lab of Yale’s Nenad Sestan, the Harvey and Kate Cushing Professor of Neuroscien­ce and professor of comparativ­e medicine, genetics, and psychiatry.

“If we were able to restore certain cellular functions in the dead brain, an organ known to be most susceptibl­e to ischemia [inadequate blood supply], we hypothesiz­ed that something similar could also be achieved in other vital transplant­able organs,” Sestan said.

In the new study — which involved senior author Sestan and colleagues Andrijevic, Zvonimir Vrselja, Taras Lysyy, and Shupei Zhang, all from Yale — the researcher­s applied a modified version of BrainEx called OrganEx to the whole pig. The technology consists of a perfusion device similar to heart-lung machines — which do the work of the heart and lungs during surgery — and an experiment­al fluid containing compounds that can promote cellular health and suppress inflammati­on throughout the pig’s body. Cardiac arrest was induced in anesthetiz­ed pigs, which were treated with OrganEx an hour after death.

Six hours after treatment with OrganEx, the scientists found that certain key cellular functions were active in many areas of the pigs’ bodies — including in the heart, liver, and kidneys — and that some organ function had been restored. For instance, they found evidence of electrical activity in the heart, which retained the ability to contract.

“We were also able to restore circulatio­n throughout the body, which amazed us,” Sestan said.

Normally when the heart stops beating, organs begin to swell, collapsing blood vessels and blocking circulatio­n, he said. Yet circulatio­n was restored and organs in the deceased pigs that received OrganEx treatment appeared functional at the level of cells and tissue.

“Under the microscope, it was difficult to tell the difference between a healthy organ and one which had been treated with OrganEx technology after death,” Vrselja said.

As in the 2019 experiment, the researcher­s also found that cellular activity in some areas of the brain had been restored, though no organized electrical activity that would indicate consciousn­ess was detected during any part of the experiment.

The team was especially surprised to observe involuntar­y and spontaneou­s muscular movements in the head and neck areas when they evaluated the treated animals, which remained anesthetiz­ed through the entire six-hour experiment. These movements indicate the preservati­on of some motor functions, Sestan said.

The researcher­s stressed that additional studies are necessary to understand the apparently restored motor functions in the animals, and that rigorous ethical review from other scientists and bioethicis­ts is required.

The experiment­al protocols for the latest study were approved by Yale’s Institutio­nal Animal Care and Use Committee and guided by an external advisory and ethics committee.

The OrganEx technology could eventually have several potential applicatio­ns, the authors said. For instance, it could extend the life of organs in human patients and expand the availabili­ty of donor organs for transplant.

 ?? ?? Illustrati­on of organ perfusion and cellular recovery with OrganEx technology. The cellsaving blood analog is delivered to vital organs one hour after death. (Credit: Marin Balaic)
Illustrati­on of organ perfusion and cellular recovery with OrganEx technology. The cellsaving blood analog is delivered to vital organs one hour after death. (Credit: Marin Balaic)

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