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Item Abstract 16: Insights into Highly Engraftable Hematopoietic Cells from 27-Year Cryopreserved Umbilical Cord Blood(Oxford University Press, 2023-09-04) Broxmeyer, Hal; Luchsinger, Larry; Weinberg, Rona; Jimenez, Alexandra; Masson Frenet, Emeline; van't Hof, Wouter; Capitano, Maegan; Hillyer, Christopher; Kaplan, Mark; Cooper, Scott; Ropa, James; Microbiology and Immunology, School of MedicineIntroduction: Cord blood banking has consistently outpaced the utilization of cord blood units (CBUs). Thus, the average duration of cryopreservation among banked CBUs will likely continue to increase. It remains unclear how long cryopreserved CBUs remain functional, and it is critical to determine whether duration of cryopreservation should be used as an exclusionary criterion during selection for clinical use or if alternative post-thaw metrics can identify potent cryopreserved CBUs regardless of age. Objectives: Our goal was to determine whether long-term (27-year) cryopreserved CBUs retain viable and functional hematopoietic stem (HSCs) and progenitor cells (HPCs). We further sought to leverage differences in HSC/HPC function (measured by in vivo engraftment) to demonstrate the utility of using omics approaches to identify candidate genes for use as molecular potency markers. Methods: We performed comprehensive ex vivo, in vivo, and molecular analyses on the numbers, viability, and function of three 27-year cryopreserved CBUs using 3-year cryopreserved and fresh CBUs for comparison. Assays included viability staining, immunophenotyping by flow cytometry, primary and secondary colony forming unit (CFU) assays, ex vivo expansion of immunophenotypic HSCs/HPCs/CFUs, limiting dilution transplantations into immune-deficient mice, secondary transplantations, and RNA-sequencing of sorted HSCs and multipotent progenitor cells. Results: Compared to fresh and recently cryopreserved CBU controls, long-term cryopreserved CBUs yield statistically similar numbers of viable immunophenotypic HSCs, multipotent HPCs, and committed myeloid and lymphoid HPCs. They retain highly functional cells, demonstrating similar primary and secondary CFU numbers and expansion capacity compared to controls, as well as robust engraftment, SCID repopulating cell frequency, and secondary engraftment capacity in mouse models of transplantation. Transcriptomic modelling revealed 18 genes, including MALT1 and MAP2K1, and several gene programs, including lineage determination programs and oxidative stress responses, that are strongly enriched in high engrafting HSCs/HPCs. Discussion: CBUs cryopreserved for up to 27 years retain highly functional HSCs/HPCs. Thus, duration of cryopreservation alone is not an ideal exclusionary criteria for selection of CBUs. Preserving older CBUs may help to maintain a large and diverse pool of donors for clinical selection. Further, transcriptomics can identify candidate genes associated with engraftment for elucidation of possible CBU potency markers regardless of the duration of cryopreservation.Item Characterization and Function of Cryopreserved Bone Marrow from Deceased Organ Donors: A Potential Viable Alternative Graft Source(Elsevier, 2023) Johnstone, Brian H.; Woods, John R.; Goebel, W. Scott; Gu, Dongsheng; Lin, Chieh-Han; Miller, Hannah M.; Musall, Kelsey M.; Sherry, Aubrey M.; Bailey, Barbara J.; Sims, Emily; Sinn, Anthony L.; Pollok, Karen E.; Spellman, Stephen; Auletta, Jeffrey J.; Woods, Erik J.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineDespite the readily available graft sources for allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (alloHCT), a significant unmet need remains in the timely provision of suitable unrelated donor grafts. This shortage is related to the rarity of certain HLA alleles in the donor pool, nonclearance of donors owing to infectious disease or general health status, and prolonged graft procurement and processing times. An alternative hematopoietic progenitor cell (HPC) graft source obtained from the vertebral bodies (VBs) of deceased organ donors could alleviate many of the obstacles associated with using grafts from healthy living donors or umbilical cord blood (UCB). Deceased organ donor-derived bone marrow (BM) can be preemptively screened, cryogenically banked for on-demand use, and made available in adequate cell doses for HCT. We have developed a good manufacturing practice (GMP)-compliant process to recover and cryogenically bank VB-derived HPCs from deceased organ donor (OD) BM. Here we present results from an analysis of HPCs from BM obtained from 250 deceased donors to identify any substantial difference in composition or quality compared with HPCs from BM aspirated from the iliac crests of healthy living donors. BM from deceased donor VBs was processed in a central GMP facility and packaged for cryopreservation in 5% DMSO/2.5% human serum albumin. BM aspirated from living donor iliac crests was obtained and used for comparison. A portion of each specimen was analyzed before and after cryopreservation by flow cytometry and colony-forming unit potential. Bone marrow chimerism potential was assessed in irradiated immunocompromised NSG mice. Analysis of variance with Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons was used to determine how cryopreservation affects BM cells and to evaluate indicators of successful engraftment of BM cells into irradiated murine models. The t test (with 95% confidence intervals [CIs]) was used to compare cells from deceased donors and living donors. A final dataset of complete clinical and matched laboratory data from 226 cryopreserved samples was used in linear regressions to predict outcomes of BM HPC processing. When compared before and after cryopreservation, OD-derived BM HPCs were found to be stable, with CD34+ cells maintaining high viability and function after thawing. The yield from a single donor is sufficient for transplantation of an average of 1.6 patients (range, 1.2 to 7.5). CD34+ cells from OD-derived HPCs from BM productively engrafted sublethally irradiated immunocompromised mouse BM (>44% and >67% chimerism at 8 and 16 weeks, respectively). Flow cytometry and secondary transplantation confirmed that OD HPCs from BM is composed of long-term engrafting CD34+CD38-CD45RA-CD90+CD49f+ HSCs. Linear regression identified no meaningful predictive associations between selected donor-related characteristics and OD BM HPC quality or yield. Collectively, these data demonstrate that cryopreserved BM HPCs from deceased organ donors is potent and functionally equivalent to living donor BM HPCs and is a viable on-demand graft source for clinical HCT. Prospective clinical trials will soon commence in collaboration with the Center for International Blood and Marrow Research to assess the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of Ossium HPCs from BM (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT05068401).Item Cryopreservation Preserves Cell-Type Composition and Gene Expression Profiles in Bone Marrow Aspirates From Multiple Myeloma Patients(Frontiers Media, 2021-04-21) Chen, Duojiao; Abu Zaid, Mohammad I.; Reiter, Jill L.; Czader, Magdalena; Wang, Lin; McGuire, Patrick; Xuei, Xiaoling; Gao, Hongyu; Huang, Kun; Abonour, Rafat; Walker, Brian A.; Liu, Yunlong; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicineSingle-cell RNA sequencing reveals gene expression differences between individual cells and also identifies different cell populations that are present in the bulk starting material. To obtain an accurate assessment of patient samples, single-cell suspensions need to be generated as soon as possible once the tissue or sample has been collected. However, this requirement poses logistical challenges for experimental designs involving multiple samples from the same subject since these samples would ideally be processed at the same time to minimize technical variation in data analysis. Although cryopreservation has been shown to largely preserve the transcriptome, it is unclear whether the freeze-thaw process might alter gene expression profiles in a cell-type specific manner or whether changes in cell-type proportions might also occur. To address these questions in the context of multiple myeloma clinical studies, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) to compare fresh and frozen cells isolated from bone marrow aspirates of six multiple myeloma patients, analyzing both myeloma cells (CD138+) and cells constituting the microenvironment (CD138-). We found that cryopreservation using 90% fetal calf serum and 10% dimethyl sulfoxide resulted in highly consistent gene expression profiles when comparing fresh and frozen samples from the same patient for both CD138+ myeloma cells (R ≥ 0.96) and for CD138- cells (R ≥ 0.9). We also demonstrate that CD138- cell-type proportions showed minimal alterations, which were mainly related to small differences in immune cell subtype sensitivity to the freeze-thaw procedures. Therefore, when processing fresh multiple myeloma samples is not feasible, cryopreservation is a useful option in single-cell profiling studies.Item Fundamental cryobiology of pancreatic islets of Langerhans(1996) Benson, Charles ThomasItem How old is too old? In vivo engraftment of human peripheral blood stem cells cryopreserved for up to 18 years - implications for clinical transplantation and stability programs(Baishideng, 2020-05-16) Underwood, John; Rahim, Mahvish; West, Carijo; Britton, Rebecca; Skipworth, Elaine; Graves, Vicki; Sexton, Steven; Harris, Hillary; Schwering, Dave; Sinn, Anthony; Pollok, Karen E.; Robertson, Kent A.; Goebel, W. Scott; Hege, Kerry M.; Pediatrics, School of MedicineBACKGROUND Peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) are commonly cryopreserved awaiting clinical use for hematopoietic stem cell transplant. Long term cryopreservation is commonly defined as five years or longer, and limited data exists regarding how long PBSC can be cryopreserved and retain the ability to successfully engraft. Clinical programs, stem cell banks, and regulatory and accrediting agencies interested in product stability would benefit from such data. Thus, we assessed recovery and colony forming ability of PBSC following long-term cryopreservation as well as their ability to engraft in NOD/SCID/IL-2Rγnull (NSG) mice. AIM To investigate the in vivo engraftment potential of long-term cryopreserved PBSC units. METHODS PBSC units which were collected and frozen using validated clinical protocols were obtained for research use from the Cellular Therapy Laboratory at Indiana University Health. These units were thawed in the Cellular Therapy Laboratory using clinical standards of practice, and the pre-freeze and post-thaw characteristics of the units were compared. Progenitor function was assessed using standard colony-forming assays. CD34-selected cells were transplanted into immunodeficient mice to assess stem cell function. RESULTS Ten PBSC units with mean of 17 years in cryopreservation (range 13.6-18.3 years) demonstrated a mean total cell recovery of 88% ± 12% (range 68%-110%) and post-thaw viability of 69% ± 17% (range 34%-86%). BFU-E growth was shown in 9 of 10 units and CFU-GM growth in 7 of 10 units post-thaw. Immunodeficient mice were transplanted with CD34-selected cells from four randomly chosen PBSC units. All mice demonstrated long-term engraftment at 12 wk with mean 34% ± 24% human CD45+ cells, and differentiation with presence of human CD19+, CD3+ and CD33+ cells. Harvested bone marrow from all mice demonstrated growth of erythroid and myeloid colonies. CONCLUSION We demonstrated engraftment of clinically-collected and thawed PBSC following cryopreservation up to 18 years in NSG mice, signifying likely successful clinical transplantation of PBSC following long-term cryopreservation.Item Implantation of a Novel Cryopreserved Viable Osteochondral Allograft for Articular Cartilage Repair in the Knee(Thieme, 2018-07) Vangsness, C. Thomas, Jr.; Higgs, Geoffrey; Hoffman, James K.; Farr, Jack; Davidson, Philip A.; Milstein, Farrell; Geraghty, Sandra; Orthopaedic Surgery, School of MedicineRestoration and repair of articular cartilage injuries remain a challenge for orthopaedic surgeons. The standard first-line treatment of articular cartilage lesions is marrow stimulation; however, this procedure can often result in the generation of fibrous repair cartilage rather than the biomechanically superior hyaline cartilage. Marrow stimulation is also often limited to smaller lesions, less than 2 cm2. Larger lesions may require implantation of a fresh osteochondal allograft, though a short shelf life, size-matched donor requirements, potential challenges of bone healing, limited availability, and the relatively high price limit the wide use of this therapeutic approach. We present a straightforward, single-stage surgical technique of a novel reparative and restorative approach for articular cartilage repair with the implantation of a cryopreserved viable osteochondral allograft (CVOCA). The CVOCA contains full-thickness articular cartilage and a thin layer of subchondral bone, and maintains the intact native cartilage architecture with viable chondrocytes, growth factors, and extracellular matrix proteins to promote articular cartilage repair. We report the results of a retrospective case series of three patients who presented with articular cartilage lesions more than 2 cm2 and were treated with the CVOCA using the presented surgical technique. Patients were followed up to 2 years after implantation of the CVOCA and all three patients had satisfactory outcomes without adverse events. Controlled randomized studies are suggested for evaluation of CVOCA efficacy, safety, and long-term outcomes.Item Insights into highly engraftable hematopoietic cells from 27-year cryopreserved umbilical cord blood(Elsevier, 2023) Broxmeyer, Hal E.; Luchsinger, Larry L.; Singer Weinberg, Rona; Jimenez, Alexandra; Masson Frenet, Emeline; Van't Hof, Wouter; Capitano, Maegan L.; Hillyer, Christopher D.; Kaplan, Mark H.; Cooper, Scott; Ropa, James; Microbiology and Immunology, School of MedicineUmbilical cord blood transplantation is a life-saving treatment for malignant and non-malignant hematologic disorders. It remains unclear how long cryopreserved units remain functional, and the length of cryopreservation is often used as a criterion to exclude older units. We demonstrate that long-term cryopreserved cord blood retains similar numbers of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells compared with fresh and recently cryopreserved cord blood units. Long-term cryopreserved units contain highly functional cells, yielding robust engraftment in mouse transplantation models. We also leverage differences between units to examine gene programs associated with better engraftment. Transcriptomic analyses reveal that gene programs associated with lineage determination and oxidative stress are enriched in high engrafting cord blood, revealing potential molecular markers to be used as potency markers for cord blood unit selection regardless of length of cryopreservation. In summary, cord blood units cryopreserved for extended periods retain engrafting potential and can potentially be used for patient treatment.Item Survivals of mouse oocytes approach 100% after vitrification in 3-fold diluted media and ultra-rapid warming by an IR laser pulse(Elsevier, 2014-06) Jin, Bo; Kleinhans, F.W.; Mazur, Peter; Department of Physics, School of ScienceVitrification is the most sought after route to the cryopreservation of animal embryos and oocytes and other cells of medical, genetic, and agricultural importance. Current thinking is that successful vitrification requires that cells be suspended in and permeated by high concentrations of protective solutes and that they be cooled at very high rates to below − 100°C. We report here that neither of these beliefs holds for mouse oocytes. Rather, we find that if mouse oocytes are suspended in media that produce considerable osmotic dehydration before vitrification and are subsequently warmed at ultra high rates (10,000,000°C/min) achieved by a laser pulse, nearly 100% will survive even when cooled rather slowly and when the concentration of solutes in the medium is only 1/3rd of standard.