Development of a panel for detection of pathogens in xenotransplantation donor pigs

Author:

Otabi Hikari1,Miura Hiroto1,Uryu Haruka12,Kobayashi‐Harada Rana2,Abe Kanako1,Nakano Kazuaki3,Umeyama Kazuhiro3,Hasegawa Koki4,Tsukahara Takamitsu5,Nagashima Hiroshi34,Inoue Ryo12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Animal Science Department of Applied Biological Sciences Faculty of Agriculture Setsunan University Osaka Japan

2. Laboratory of Animal Science Kyoto Prefectural University Kyoto Japan

3. Meiji University International Institute for Bio‐Resource Research Kawasaki Japan

4. Laboratory of Medical Bioengineering Department of Life Sciences School of Agriculture Meiji University Kawasaki Japan

5. Kyoto Institute of Nutrition & Pathology Kyoto Japan

Abstract

AbstractThere have been high expectations in recent years of using xenotransplantation and regenerative medicine to treat humans, and pigs have been utilized as the donor model. Pigs used for these clinical applications must be microbiologically safe, that is, free of infectious pathogens, to prevent infections not only in livestock, but also in humans. Currently, however, the full spectrum of pathogens that can infect to the human host or cause disease in transplanted porcine organs/cells has not been fully defined. In the present study, we thus aimed to develop a larger panel for the detection of pathogens that could potentially infect xenotransplantation donor pigs. Our newly developed panel, which consisted of 76 highly sensitive PCR detection assays, was able to detect 41 viruses, 1 protozoa, and a broad range of bacteria (by use of universal 16S rRNA primers). The applicability of this panel was validated using blood samples from uterectomy‐born piglets, and pathogens suspected to be vertically transmitted from sows to piglets were successfully detected. We estimate that, at least for viruses and bacteria, the number of target pathogens detected by the developed screening panel should suffice to meet the microbiological safety levels required worldwide for xenotransplantation and/or regenerative therapy. This panel provides greater diagnosis options to produce donor pigs so that it would render unnecessary to screen for all pathogens listed. Instead, the new panel could be utilized to detect only required pathogens within a given geographic range where the donor pigs for xenotransplantation have been and/or are being developed.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Transplantation,Immunology

Reference27 articles.

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2. Compensation of Disabled Organogeneses in Genetically Modified Pig Fetuses by Blastocyst Complementation

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5. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.Source Animal Product Preclinical and Clinical Issues Concerning the Use of Xenotransplantation Products in Humans Guidance for Industry.2016.https://www.fda.gov/media/102126/download

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