Zhe Gao’s research while affiliated with University of Minnesota, Duluth and other places

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Publications (40)


Advancing organ cryopreservation through scalable polymer coating of iron oxide nanoparticles
  • Article

December 2022

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12 Reads

Cryobiology

Jacqueline L. Pasek-Allen

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Zhe Gao

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Randall K. Wilharm

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[...]

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John C. Bischof


Correction: Cryopreservation of Whole Rat Livers by Vitrification and Nanowarming
  • Article
  • Full-text available

November 2022

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168 Reads

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2 Citations

Annals of Biomedical Engineering

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Cryopreservation of Whole Rat Livers by Vitrification and Nanowarming

October 2022

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128 Reads

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34 Citations

Annals of Biomedical Engineering

Liver cryopreservation has the potential to enable indefinite organ banking. This study investigated vitrification—the ice-free cryopreservation of livers in a glass-like state—as a promising alternative to conventional cryopreservation, which uniformly fails due to damage from ice formation or cracking. Our unique “nanowarming” technology, which involves perfusing biospecimens with cryoprotective agents (CPAs) and silica-coated iron oxide nanoparticles (sIONPs) and then, after vitrification, exciting the nanoparticles via radiofrequency waves, enables rewarming of vitrified specimens fast enough to avoid ice formation and uniformly enough to prevent cracking from thermal stresses, thereby addressing the two main failures of conventional cryopreservation. This study demonstrates the ability to load rat livers with both CPA and sIONPs by vascular perfusion, cool them rapidly to an ice-free vitrified state, and rapidly and homogenously rewarm them. While there was some elevation of liver enzymes (Alanine Aminotransferase) and impaired indocyanine green (ICG) excretion, the nanowarmed livers were viable, maintained normal tissue architecture, had preserved vascular endothelium, and demonstrated hepatocyte and organ-level function, including production of bile and hepatocyte uptake of ICG during normothermic reperfusion. These findings suggest that cryopreservation of whole livers via vitrification and nanowarming has the potential to achieve organ banking for transplant and other biomedical applications.


Injectable and Repeatable Inductive Heating of Iron Oxide Nanoparticle-Enhanced "PHIL" Embolic toward Tumor Treatment

September 2022

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35 Reads

ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces

Deep-seated tumors of the liver, brain, and other organ systems often recur after initial surgical, chemotherapeutic, radiation, or focal treatments. Repeating these treatments is often invasive and traumatic. We propose an iron oxide nanoparticle (IONP)-enhanced precipitating hydrophobic injectable liquid (PHIL, MicroVention inc.) embolic as a localized dual treatment implant for nutrient deprivation and multiple repeatable thermal ablation. Following a single injection, multiple thermal treatments can be repeated as needed, based on monitoring of tumor growth/recurrence. Herein we show the ability to create an injectable stable PHIL-IONP solution, monitor deposition of the PHIL-IONP precipitate dispersion by μCT, and gauge the IONP distribution within the embolic by magnetic resonance imaging. Once precipitated, the implant could be heated to reach therapeutic temperatures >8 °C for thermal ablation (clinical temperature of ∼45 °C), in a model disk and a 3D tumor bed model. Heat output was not affected by physiological conditions, multiple heating sessions, or heating at intervals over a 1 month duration. Further, in ex vivo mice hind-limb tumors, we could noninvasively heat the embolic to an "ablative" temperature elevation of 17 °C (clinically 54 °C) in the first 5 min and maintain the temperature rise over +8 °C (clinically a temperature of 45 °C) for longer than 15 min.


Bioapplications of Magnetic Nanowires: Barcodes, Biocomposites, Heaters

August 2022

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140 Reads

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2 Citations

IEEE Transactions on Magnetics

Magnetic nanowires (MNWs) can have their moments reversed via several mechanisms that are controlled using the composition, length, diameter, and density of nanowires in arrays as-synthesized or as individual nanoparticles in assays or gels. This tailoring of magnetic reversal leads to unique properties that can be used as a signature for reading out the type of MNW for applications as nano-barcodes. When synthesized inside track-etched polycarbonate membranes, the resulting MNW-embedded membranes can be used as biocompatible bandaids for detection without contact or optical sighting. When etched out of the growth template, free-floating MNWs are internalized by cells at 37 °C such that cells and/or exosomes can be collected and detected. In applications of cryopreservation, MNWs can be suspended in cryopreservation agents (CPAs) for injection into the blood vessels of tissues and organs as they are vitrified to −200 °C. Using an alternating magnetic field, the MNWs can then be nanowarmed rapidly to prevent crystallization and uniformly to prevent cracking of specimens, for example, as grafts or transplants. This invited paper is a review of recent progress in the specific bioapplications of MNWs to barcodes, biocomposites, and nanowarmers.


CPA Formulations.
Ice Control during Cryopreservation of Heart Valves and Maintenance of Post-Warming Cell Viability

June 2022

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145 Reads

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9 Citations

Heart valve cryopreservation was employed as a model for the development of complex tissue preservation methods based upon vitrification and nanowarming. Porcine heart valves were loaded with cryoprotectant formulations step wise and vitrified in 1–30 mL cryoprotectant formulations ± Fe nanoparticles ± 0.6 M disaccharides, cooled to −100 °C, and stored at −135 °C. Nanowarming was performed in a single ~100 s step by inductive heating within a magnetic field. Controls consisted of fresh and convection-warmed vitrified heart valves without nanoparticles. After washing, cell viability was assessed by metabolic assay. The nanowarmed leaflets were well preserved, with a viability similar to untreated fresh leaflets over several days post warming. The convection-warmed leaflet viability was not significantly different than that of the nanowarmed leaflets immediately after rewarming; however, a significantly higher nanowarmed leaflet viability (p < 0.05) was observed over time in vitro. In contrast, the associated artery and fibrous cardiac muscle were at best 75% viable, and viability decreased over time in vitro. Supplementation of lower concentration cryoprotectant formulations with disaccharides promoted viability. Thicker tissues benefited from longer-duration cryoprotectant loading steps. The best outcomes included a post-warming incubation step with α-tocopherol and an apoptosis inhibitor, Q-VD-OPH. This work demonstrates progress in the control of ice formation and cytotoxicity hurdles for the preservation of complex tissues.




Thermal Analyses of Nanowarming-Assisted Recovery of the Heart From Cryopreservation by Vitrification

November 2021

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75 Reads

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14 Citations

Journal of Heat Transfer

This study explores thermal design aspects of nanowarming-assisted recovery of the heart from indefinite cryogenic storage, where nanowarming is the volumetric heating effect of ferromagnetic nanoparticles excited by a radio-frequency electromagnet field. This study uses computation means, while focusing on the human heart and the rat heart models. The underlying nanoparticle loading characteristics are adopted from a recent, proof-of-concept experimental study. While uniformly distributed nanoparticles can lead to uniform rewarming, and thereby minimize adverse effects associated with ice crystallization and thermomechanical stress, the combined effects of heart anatomy and nanoparticle loading limitations present practical challenges which this study comes to address. Results of this study demonstrate that under less-than-ideal conditions, nonuniform nanoparticles warming may lead to a subcritical rewarming rate in some parts of the domain, excessive heating in others, and increased exposure potential to cryoprotective agents (CPAs) toxicity. Nonetheless, results of this study also demonstrate that computerized planning of the cryopreservation protocol and container design can help mitigate the associated adverse effects, with examples relating to adjusting the CPA and/or nanoparticle concentration, and selecting heart container geometry and size. In conclusion, nanowarming provides superior conditions for organ recovery from cryogenic storage, which comes with an elevated complexity of protocol planning and optimization.


Citations (28)


... But more interesting and promising remains the use of these novel nanotechnologies in cryopreservation of organs. The encouraging studies on rat livers, hearts, and kidneys have been published in recent years [131][132][133][134][135]. So, in the study of Sharma et al. [131], rat kidneys were infused through the renal artery with a blend of CPAs and silicacoated iron oxide NPs (sIONPs). ...

Reference:

Nanoparticles in low-temperature preservation of biological systems of animal origin
Correction: Cryopreservation of Whole Rat Livers by Vitrification and Nanowarming

Annals of Biomedical Engineering

... But more interesting and promising remains the use of these novel nanotechnologies in cryopreservation of organs. The encouraging studies on rat livers, hearts, and kidneys have been published in recent years [131][132][133][134][135]. So, in the study of Sharma et al. [131], rat kidneys were infused through the renal artery with a blend of CPAs and silicacoated iron oxide NPs (sIONPs). ...

Cryopreservation of Whole Rat Livers by Vitrification and Nanowarming
  • Citing Article
  • October 2022

Annals of Biomedical Engineering

... This technique essentially halts all biological activity, preserving the delicate cellular structures and molecular components with remarkable fidelity [5,8,25]. The key to successful vitrification lies in carefully controlling the cooling and warming rates with rapid cooling and warming preventing ice formation [5,7,8]. ...

Ice Control during Cryopreservation of Heart Valves and Maintenance of Post-Warming Cell Viability

... The sIONPs and EMG308 were prepared in CPA (M22, VMP) or water. Recent work in organ vitrification was conducted with sIONPs [30,48], but uncoated EMG308 was used for simplicity in some physical demonstrations in these studies. ...

Phosphonate coating of commercial iron oxide nanoparticles for nanowarming cryopreserved samples

Journal of Materials Chemistry B

... Another important property that makes this type of material suitable to be used in bio-medicine is that magnetic nanomaterials can be heated by an applied magnetic field. Thus, the data presented in the literature show that magnetic nanoparticles can be used to transport drugs in the body, for the treatment of cancer (by hyperthermia or magneto-mechanical effect), and as contrast agents for cancer cell visualization [10][11][12], etc. ...

Bioapplications of Magnetic Nanowires: Barcodes, Biocomposites, Heaters

IEEE Transactions on Magnetics

... In recent years, studies on organ and tissue cryopreservation have highlighted the importance of proper cryoprotectant addition. Contemporary cryoprotectants, like M22, VMP and VS55, contain any combination of the most commonly used cryoprotecting agents, ethylene glycol (EG) and DMSO [27], which have been used extensively in cryoprotection of human oocytes and zygotes [28], ovarian tissue [29], rat and rabbit kidneys [30,31], mouse hearts [32], and lamb cartilage [33]. ...

Vitrification and Rewarming of Magnetic Nanoparticle-Loaded Rat Hearts
  • Citing Article
  • December 2021

Cryobiology

... Sharma et al. loaded 10 mg Fe ml -1 sIONPs into the kidneys at a constant rate of 0.5 ml min -1 after CPA loading [31]. The average maximum temperature gradient within the kidneys during the nanowarming process reached 15.3 • C significantly below the stress-to-fracture temperature limit at 38 • C that the kidney could withstand the stress before it experiences fracture or failure in VS55. ...

Vitrification and Nanowarming of Kidneys
  • Citing Article
  • August 2021

Cryobiology

... When dealing with these combined factors, nonuniform warming of NPs can lead to suboptimal rewarming rates in certain regions, excessive heating in others, and an increased risk of exposure to the toxicity of CPAs. Nevertheless, Joshi et al. [147] also emphasizes that strategic planning of cryopreservation protocols and container designs can help to mitigate these adverse effects. This includes adjustments in the cryoprotectant or NP concentrations and the selection of appropriate container geometry and size. ...

Thermal Analyses of Nanowarming-Assisted Recovery of the Heart From Cryopreservation by Vitrification
  • Citing Article
  • November 2021

Journal of Heat Transfer

... The successful nanowarming of tissues [196] and small animal organs [157,197] has yielded encouraging results. In a recent study, Han et al. [159] successfully transplanted a nanowarmed, vitrified rat kidney that had been preserved for 100 days. ...

Vitrification and Rewarming of Magnetic Nanoparticle‐Loaded Rat Hearts

... But more interesting and promising remains the use of these novel nanotechnologies in cryopreservation of organs. The encouraging studies on rat livers, hearts, and kidneys have been published in recent years [131][132][133][134][135]. So, in the study of Sharma et al. [131], rat kidneys were infused through the renal artery with a blend of CPAs and silicacoated iron oxide NPs (sIONPs). ...

Vitrification and Nanowarming of Kidneys