The present historical review reports the clinical experiences of transplantations from animal to human. The first transplantation attempts were made without any knowledge of the species barrier. The pioneers of xenotransplantation realized xenotransfusions as early as the 16th century, then cell and tissue xenotransplantations in the 19th century. At the beginning of the 20th century, xenotransplantation of testicles became the latest craze. At the same time, and later in the 1960s, organ xenotransplantations were attempted, with disappointing results. Mathieu Jaboulay, Serge Voronoff, Keith Reemtsma, James Hardy, Denton Cooley, Thomas Starzl, Christiaan Barnard and Leonard Bailey were among the pionneers of xenotransplantation. Recent trials concerned above all tissue and cell xenotransplantations. Nowadays, with encapsulation, transgenesis, and cloning, great advances have been made for controlling xenograft rejection, but ethical questions linked to the risk of infections have become a major pre-occupation within the scientific community and the general population.
Adjustment of catalytic activity in response to diverse ambient temperatures is fundamental to life on Earth. A crucial example of this is photosynthesis, where solar energy is converted into electrochemical potential that drives oxygen and biomass generation at temperatures ranging from those of frigid Antarctica to those of scalding hot springs. The energy conversion proceeds by concerted mobilization of electrons and protons on photoexcitation of reaction centre protein complexes. Following physicochemical paradigms, the rates of imperative steps in this process were predicted to increase exponentially with rising temperatures, resulting in different yields of solar energy conversion at the distinct growth temperatures of photosynthetic mesophiles and extremophiles. In contrast, here we show a meticulous adjustment of energy conversion rate, resulting in similar yields from mesophiles and thermophiles. The key molecular players in the temperature adjustment process consist of a cluster of hitherto unrecognized protein cavities and an adjacent packing motif that jointly impart local flexibility crucial to the reaction centre proteins. Mutations within the packing motif of mesophiles that increase the bulkiness of the amino-acid side chains, and thus reduce the size of the cavities, promote thermophilic behaviour. This novel biomechanical mechanism accounts for the slowing of the catalytic reaction above physiological temperatures in contradiction to the classical Arrhenius paradigm. The mechanism provides new guidelines for manipulating the acclimatization of enzymes to the ambient temperatures of diverse habitats. More generally, it reveals novel protein elements that are of potential significance for modulating structure-activity relationships in membrane and globular proteins alike.
Aims/hypothesis. Pig islets could transmit porcine endogenous retroviruses (PERV) to diabetic patients. Our previous work showed that pig islets expressed low levels of PERV mRNA and were not likely to transmit PERV to human cells in vitro. The real risk of infection during pig tissue xenografts can only be evaluated by in vivo experiments. Methods. Nude mice bearing tumours containing human 293 cells were grafted with specific pathogenfree pig islets or PERV-producing pig PK15 cells to determine whether pig cells could transmit PERV to mouse and human cells in vivo. Infection was monitored by PCR, long PCR, RT-PCR and long RT-PCR. As detection of PERV sequences could be due to the presence of residual pig cells, we looked for pig mitochondrial (mt) DNA. Quantitative PCR for PERV and pig mt DNA was done to compare the PERV-topig mt (P-to-M) ratio of each sample with the reference ratio for grafted pig cells. Results. Among 78 mouse tissues from PK15-grafted mice, 54 and 72 were positive for gag and pig mt DNA, respectively. Human tumours developed in these mice were positive for PERV (78%) and pig mt (89%). The P-to-M ratios for mouse tissues and PERV-positive human tumours from PK15-grafted mice were higher than the ratio in PK15 cells. Among 41 tissues from pig islet cell-grafted mice, 7 were positive for PERV (3 lymph nodes, 1 kidney, 2 salivary glands, 1 ovary), and 14 were positive for pig mt DNA. Three of these samples (1 lymph node, 1 kidney and 1 salivary gland) were positive for gag DNA, but negative for pig mt DNA. One human tumour in these mice was positive for PERV DNA. P-to-M reference ratio in grafted islet cells was 0.05±0.03. The three PERVpositive lymph nodes contained 78 gag/3 mt copies (P-to-M: 26), 101 gag/3 mt copies (P-to-M: 34), and 4 gag/0 mt copies. The two PERV-positive salivary glands contained 14 gag/1 mt copies, and 28 gag/0 mt copies. The ovary and the kidney contained 46 gag/ 3 mt and 69 gag/0 mt copies, respectively. The PERV-positive human tumour contained 47 gag/3 mt copies. Conclusions/interpretation. Microchimerism and PERV transmission were frequently observed in both mouse and human tissues during grafting of pig PK15 cells into nude mice bearing human tumours, and sometimes during pig islet xenograft in this model. This strengthens the notion that there is a risk of transmitting PERV during pig islet xenograft. [Diabetologia (2002) 45:914-923] Keywords Xenograft, pig endogenous retrovirus, pig islet cell, PK15 cells, specific pathogen free pig, human cells, mouse. vided by E. Gouin (Ploufragan and Nantes, France) from Large-White SPF pigs (80-120 kg), aged 20 weeks, as previously described [1,2]. Pancreases were removed in betadine solution and inflated with 100 ml ice-cold sterile modified University of Wisconsin (mUW) solution and transported in mUW. Pancreases were then inflated again with 0.5 ml/g of mUW solution containing 2 mg/ml Liberase (Roche Diagnostics, Meylan, France) and placed in a digestion chamber filled with mUW solution kept at 36°C. Crude isle...
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