Biobanking of Human Retinas: The Next Big Leap for Eye Banks?

  • Lužnik Z
  • Parekh M
  • Bertolin M
  • et al.
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Abstract

© AlphaMed Press. Retinal degenerative diseases are one of the main clinical causes of incurable and severe visional impairment. Thus, extensive research effort is put into the development of new causal therapeutic options. Promisingly, a number of studies showed regenerative capacity in specific retinal regions (the ciliary epithelium, retinal pigmented epithelium, iris, and Müller glia cells). However, most recent research studies are based on animal models or in vitro cultured cells, probably because of the limited availability of human posterior eye tissues (vitreous, retina, and choroid). To address this, we showed in our previous reports that eye banks with large numbers of globes collected yearly could set up biorepositories/biobanks where these precious tissues are isolated, quality controlled, and finally stored for scientists and clinicians wanting to access human tissues and test their own hypotheses. These precious human posterior eye tissues could be used for further research purposes, epidemiological studies, and target validation of newly developed drugs. In addition, this could be a promising and challenging option to retrieve potential retinal stem and progenitor cells from different parts of the retina and could be a breakthrough in the future delivery of ex vivo prepared customized (histocompatible) retinal tissue on scaffolds for transplantation purposes. In this Perspective, we will consider how the biorepositories could influence the future strategies for retinal stem cell therapies.

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Lužnik, Z., Parekh, M., Bertolin, M., Griffoni, C., Ponzin, D., & Ferrari, S. (2015). Biobanking of Human Retinas: The Next Big Leap for Eye Banks? Stem Cells Translational Medicine, 4(8), 868–872. https://doi.org/10.5966/sctm.2015-0061

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