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Evaluation of encapsulating and microporous nondegradable hydrogel scaffold designs on islet engraftment in rodent models of diabetes.

Citation
Rios, P. D., et al. “Evaluation Of Encapsulating And Microporous Nondegradable Hydrogel Scaffold Designs On Islet Engraftment In Rodent Models Of Diabetes.”. Biotechnology And Bioengineering, pp. 2356-2364.
Center University of Michigan
Author Peter D Rios, Michael Skoumal, Jeffrey Liu, Richard Youngblood, Ekaterina Kniazeva, Andrés J García, Lonnie D Shea
Keywords Encapsulating, hydrogel, microporous, polyethylene glycol (PEG)
Abstract

Islet transplantation is a promising therapeutic option for type 1 diabetes mellitus, yet the current delivery into the hepatic portal vasculature is limited by poor engraftment. Biomaterials have been used as a means to promote engraftment and function at extrahepatic sites, with strategies being categorized as encapsulation or microporous scaffolds that can either isolate or integrate islets with the host tissue, respectively. Although these approaches are typically studied separately using distinct material platforms, herein, we developed nondegradable polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based hydrogels for islet encapsulation or as microporous scaffolds for islet seeding to compare the initial engraftment and function of islets in syngeneic diabetic mice. Normoglycemia was restored with transplantation of islets within either encapsulating or microporous hydrogels containing 700 islet equivalents (IEQ), with transplantation on microporous hydrogels producing lower blood glucose levels at earlier times. A glucose challenge test at 1 month after transplant indicated that encapsulated islets had a delay in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, whereas microporous hydrogels restored normoglycemia in times consistent with native pancreata. Encapsulated islets remained isolated from the host tissue, whereas the microporous scaffolds allowed for revascularization of the islets after transplant. Finally, we compared the inflammatory response after transplantation for the two systems and noted that microporous hydrogels had a substantially increased presence of neutrophils. Collectively, these findings suggest that both encapsulation and microporous PEG scaffold designs allow for stable engraftment of syngeneic islets and the ability to restore normoglycemia, yet the architecture influences islet function and responsiveness after transplantation.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Biotechnology and bioengineering
Volume
115
Issue
9
Number of Pages
2356-2364
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1097-0290
DOI
10.1002/bit.26741
Alternate Journal
Biotechnol. Bioeng.
PMID
29873059
PMCID
PMC6131066
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