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Vasculogenic hydrogel enhances islet survival, engraftment, and function in leading extrahepatic sites.

Citation
Weaver, J. D., et al. “Vasculogenic Hydrogel Enhances Islet Survival, Engraftment, And Function In Leading Extrahepatic Sites.”. Science Advances, p. e1700184.
Center University of Michigan
Author Jessica D Weaver, Devon M Headen, Jahizreal Aquart, Christopher T Johnson, Lonnie D Shea, Haval Shirwan, Andrés J García
Keywords inflammation, biomaterial, blood glucose, diabetes, hydrogel, in vivo imaging, islet, pancreas, transplantation, vascularization
Abstract

Islet transplantation is a promising alternative therapy for insulin-dependent patients, with the potential to eliminate life-threatening hypoglycemic episodes and secondary complications of long-term diabetes. However, widespread application of this therapy has been limited by inadequate graft function and longevity, in part due to the loss of up to 60% of the graft in the hostile intrahepatic transplant site. We report a proteolytically degradable synthetic hydrogel, functionalized with vasculogenic factors for localized delivery, engineered to deliver islet grafts to extrahepatic transplant sites via in situ gelation under physiological conditions. Hydrogels induced differences in vascularization and innate immune responses among subcutaneous, small bowel mesentery, and epididymal fat pad transplant sites with improved vascularization and reduced inflammation at the epididymal fat pad site. This biomaterial-based strategy improved the survival, engraftment, and function of a single pancreatic donor islet mass graft compared to the current clinical intraportal delivery technique. This biomaterial strategy has the potential to improve clinical outcomes in islet autotransplantation after pancreatectomy and reduce the burden on donor organ availability by maximizing graft survival in clinical islet transplantation for type 1 diabetes patients.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Science advances
Volume
3
Issue
6
Number of Pages
e1700184
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
2375-2548
DOI
10.1126/sciadv.1700184
Alternate Journal
Sci Adv
PMID
28630926
PMCID
PMC5457148
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