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University Hospital Regensburg

3 ARTICLES PUBLISHED IN JoVE

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Medicine

The Influence of Liver Resection on Intrahepatic Tumor Growth
Hannes H. Brandt 1, Valérie Nißler 2, Roland S. Croner 3
1Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU), 2Department of Surgery, University Hospital Regensburg, 3Department of Surgery, University Hospital Erlangen

A high incidence of tumor recurrence after resection of liver metastases remains an unsolved problem. The illustrated mouse model may be useful to investigate the reasons for such recurrences. It combines a liver resection model with intrahepatic tumor cell injection for the first time.

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Cancer Research

In Vivo Immunogenicity Screening of Tumor-Derived Extracellular Vesicles by Flow Cytometry of Splenic T Cells
Florian Stritzke 1,2, Hendrik Poeck 1,2,3,4, Simon Heidegger 1,2
1Department of Medicine III, School of Medicine, Technical University of Munich, 2Center for Translational Cancer Research (TranslaTUM), School of Medicine, Technical University of Munich, 3Department of Internal Medicine III, University Hospital Regensburg, 4National Centre for Tumor Diseases WERA

This manuscript describes how to assess in vivo immunogenicity of tumor cell-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) using flow cytometry. EVs derived from tumors undergoing treatment-induced immunogenic cell death seem particularly relevant in tumor immunosurveillance. This protocol exemplifies the assessment of oxaliplatin-induced immunostimulatory tumor EVs but can be adapted to various settings.

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Bioengineering

Demonstration of Self-Assembled Cell Sheet Culture and Manual Generation of a 3D Tendon/Ligament-Like Organoid by using Human Dermal Fibroblasts
Ana Luísa Graça 1, Niklas Kroner-Weigl 2, Viviana Reyes Alcaraz 1, Sigrid Müller-Deubert 1, Maximilian Rudert 3, Denitsa Docheva 1
1Department of Musculoskeletal Tissue Regeneration, Orthopaedic Hospital König-Ludwig-Haus, University of Würzburg, 2Laboratory for Experimental Trauma Surgery, Department of Trauma Surgery, University Hospital Regensburg, 3Department of Orthopaedics, Orthopaedic Hospital König-Ludwig-Haus, University of Würzburg

Herein, we demonstrate a three-step organoid model (two-dimensional [2D] expansion, 2D stimulation, three-dimensional [3D] maturation) offering a promising tool for tendon fundamental research and a potential scaffold-free method for tendon tissue engineering.

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