2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(107f) Eliminating Oxygen Supply Limitations for Transplanted Microencapsulated Islets in the Treatment of Type I Diabetes
Authors
A theoretical reaction-diffusion model was developed to predict the oxygen partial pressure profile, extent of cell death, and rate of insulin secretion in alginate microcapsules containing an islet, islet cell aggregates, and dispersed single cells exposed to specified external pO2 values, with or without PFC. Results show that hypoxic conditions are reduced, therefore enhancing islet viability and substantially maintaining insulin secretion in PFC capsules. Modeling results have predicted that a capsule containing aggregates with half the diameter of a 150μm islet, and a total tissue volume equivalent to one islet, can remain fully functional while the function of an intact islet has dropped to 20% of its normal level. Theoretical predictions have demonstrated that islet cell aggregates are extremely beneficial in maintaining beta cell function in low oxygen environments.
Methods have been developed to assess encapsulated tissue through nuclei counting, DNA quantification, and oxygen consumption rate measurements. Experiments with islets, islet cell aggregates, and INS-1 cells (a beta cell line) are underway to verify the predicted results from the reaction-diffusion model. After two days of culture in a limited oxygen environment comparisons will be made between islets, islet cell aggregates, and INS-1 cells within normal alginate and PFC alginate microcapsules in their viability by measurement of oxygen consumption rate, function by measuring insulin content, and total tissue content by measuring DNA or performing nuclei counts. We hope to experimentally demonstrate that enhanced capsule permeability and islet cell aggregates are beneficial to maintaining islet survival and function in low oxygen environments.