Wanxing Cui

Wanxing Cui

Georgetown University

Affiliated withGeorgetown University

Research Area

Biography

Dr. Wanxing Cui is the director of the Cell Therapy Manufacturing Facility at Medstar Georgetown University Hospital. Dr. Cui received medical training in Shenyang, China, and practiced general surgery as a resident surgeon for three years. He earned his Ph.D. degree at Kyoto University, Japan, in 2001 with research on bioartificial pancreas development. Since then, Dr. Cui has been working on pancreatic islet transplantation at Emory University, the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Georgetown University for more than twenty years. His research covers a wide spectrum from basic studies with rodent islets and preclinical studies with non-human primate islets to clinical trials with human islets, using a multidisciplinary translational approach. Dr. Cui has published 58 scientific papers and possesses five islet and bioengineering-related patents currently. Dr. Cui has been a standing International Pancreas and Islet Transplant Association (IPITA) member for more than 20 years. At present, Dr. Cui is an active committee member of the Association for the Advanced of Blood and Biotherapies (AABB) cellular therapies section.

JoVE Journal Publications

ArticleTotal : 1
Year
Minimizing Post-Infusion Portal Vein Bleeding during Intrahepatic Islet Transplantation in Mice
Publication title

Cited by 1

2021

Other Publications

Article
Year
Recapitulation of metabolic defects in a model of propionic acidemia using patient-derived primary hepatocytes.

Molecular genetics and metabolism| PubMed ID: 26740382

2016
2016
2017
Carbon Monoxide Inhibits Islet Apoptosis via Induction of Autophagy.

Antioxidants & redox signaling| PubMed ID: 28826228

2018
2017
2017
2019
2017
2019
2020
Alpha-1 antitrypsin suppresses macrophage activation and promotes islet graft survival after intrahepatic islet transplantation.

American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons| PubMed ID: 33047509

2020