0000000001106543

AUTHOR

Davide Lazzereschi

Efficiency of transgenesis using sperm-mediated gene transfer: generation of hDAF transgenic pigs.

SINCE the beginning of this century, replacement of failing human organs with their animal counterparts has been an interesting topic of debate for writers and scientists. In the 1960s, prolonged survival after kidney transplantation from chimpanzee to human was obtained in the United States and Europe. Nevertheless, both the progressive improvement in surgical technique and in immunosuppressant therapy and the availability of cadaveric organs and living donation have reduced the interest in xenotransplantation. Because of the increasing requests for organs and the lack of donors to meet that need, xenotransplantation has become a reliable option again for temporary organ replacement (eg, o…

research product

hDAF expression in hearts of transgenic pigs obtained by sperm-mediated gene transfer.

TRANSPLANTATON has been the choice option to treat successfully an increasing number of acute and chronic human pathologies with declining morbidity and mortality. However, availability of organs from human donors is limited and dramatically inadequate with respect to patient requests. Xenotransplantation from large-sized mammals has thus been reconsidered as a tool to overcome the present unbalance between organ offers and requests. Pigs have been chosen because they can be easily and cheaply bred; they do not raise ethical questions—their use as alimentary resources is generally admitted; and they possess organs largely human compatible for size, anatomical organization, and physiology. N…

research product