» Articles » PMID: 20001535

In Vivo Selection of Biocompatible Alginates for Islet Encapsulation and Subcutaneous Transplantation

Overview
Date 2009 Dec 17
PMID 20001535
Citations 27
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Islet encapsulation requires several properties including (1) biocompatibility, (2) immunoprotection, and (3) oxygen diffusion for islet survival and diabetes correction. New chemical alginates were tested in vivo and compared with traditional high-mannuronate and -guluronate alginates. New alginates with coupled peptide sequence (sterile lyophilized high mannuronate [SLM]-RGD3% and sterile lyophilized high guluronate [SLG]-RGD3%), to improve encapsulated cell adherence in the matrix, and alginates with a very low viscosity (VLDM7% and VLDG7%), to reduce implant size by loading a higher number of islets per volume of polymer, were implanted subcutaneously in 70 Wistar rats for comparison with alginates of high viscosity and high content of mannuronic (SLM3%) or guluronic acids (SLG3%). Permeability of alginates to 36-, 75-, and 150-kDa lectins coupled to fluorescein isothiocynate was quantified before implantation and at 2, 4, and 12 weeks after implantation. Biocompatibility (fibrosis, graft stability, immunologic infiltration by CD3/CD68 cells, and neovascularization) was assessed at each explantation time. Permeability to small molecules was found for all alginates. Impermeability to 150-kDa molecules, such as IgG, was observed only for SLM3% before implantation and was maintained up to 12 weeks after implantation. SLM3% and SLG3% demonstrated better graft stability with lower CD3/CD68 recruitment and fibrosis than the other alginates. SLM3% induced a significantly higher angiogenesis and maintained oxygen pressure at approximately 40 mm Hg for up to 4 weeks after implantation as measured by in vivo electronic paramagnetic resonance oximetry. SLM-encapsulated pig islets implanted subcutaneously in rats demonstrated no inflammatory/immunologic reactions and islets functioned for up to 60 days without immunosuppression. A traditional alginate made of high mannuronic content (SLM3%) is an adapted material to immunoprotect islets in subcutaneous tissue. No improvement was found with lower viscosity and use of GRGDSP-peptide sequence.

Citing Articles

Engineering a versatile and retrievable cell macroencapsulation device for the delivery of therapeutic proteins.

Grogg J, Vernet R, Charrier E, Urwyler M, von Rohr O, Saingier V iScience. 2023; 26(8):107372.

PMID: 37539029 PMC: 10393802. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.107372.


Type 1 diabetes and engineering enhanced islet transplantation.

Jeyagaran A, Lu C, Zbinden A, Birkenfeld A, Brucker S, Layland S Adv Drug Deliv Rev. 2022; 189:114481.

PMID: 36002043 PMC: 9531713. DOI: 10.1016/j.addr.2022.114481.


Engineering Strategies to Improve Islet Transplantation for Type 1 Diabetes Therapy.

White A, Shamul J, Xu J, Stewart S, Bromberg J, He X ACS Biomater Sci Eng. 2020; 6(5):2543-2562.

PMID: 33299929 PMC: 7720680. DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.9b01406.


Facilitating islet transplantation using a three-step approach with mesenchymal stem cells, encapsulation, and pulsed focused ultrasound.

Razavi M, Ren T, Zheng F, Telichko A, Wang J, Dahl J Stem Cell Res Ther. 2020; 11(1):405.

PMID: 32948247 PMC: 7501701. DOI: 10.1186/s13287-020-01897-z.


Alginate Formulations: Current Developments in the Race for Hydrogel-Based Cardiac Regeneration.

Cattelan G, Gerboles A, Foresti R, Pramstaller P, Rossini A, Miragoli M Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2020; 8:414.

PMID: 32457887 PMC: 7226066. DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2020.00414.