Login / Signup

Alginate encapsulation as long-term immune protection of allogeneic pancreatic islet cells transplanted into the omental bursa of macaques.

Matthew A BochenekOmid VeisehArturo J VegasJames J McGarrigleMeirigeng QiEnza MarcheseMustafa OmamiJoshua C DoloffJoshua Mendoza-EliasMohammad NourmohammadzadehArshad KhanChun-Chieh YehYuan XingDouglas IsaSofia GhaniJie LiCasey LandryAndrew R BaderKarsten OlejnikMichael ChenJennifer Hollister-LockYong WangDale L GreinerGordon C WeirBerit Løkensgard StrandAnne Mari A RokstadIgor LacíkRobert LangerDaniel G AndersonJose Oberholzer
Published in: Nature biomedical engineering (2018)
The transplantation of pancreatic islet cells could restore glycaemic control in patients with type-I diabetes. Microspheres for islet encapsulation have enabled long-term glycaemic control in diabetic rodent models; yet human patients transplanted with equivalent microsphere formulations have experienced only transient islet-graft function, owing to a vigorous foreign-body reaction (FBR), to pericapsular fibrotic overgrowth (PFO) and, in upright bipedal species, to the sedimentation of the microspheres within the peritoneal cavity. Here, we report the results of the testing, in non-human primate (NHP) models, of seven alginate formulations that were efficacious in rodents, including three that led to transient islet-graft function in clinical trials. Although one month post-implantation all formulations elicited significant FBR and PFO, three chemically modified, immune-modulating alginate formulations elicited reduced FBR. In conjunction with a minimally invasive transplantation technique into the bursa omentalis of NHPs, the most promising chemically modified alginate derivative (Z1-Y15) protected viable and glucose-responsive allogeneic islets for 4 months without the need for immunosuppression. Chemically modified alginate formulations may enable the long-term transplantation of islets for the correction of insulin deficiency.
Keyphrases