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Microencapsulation of murine leydig tumor cells for cell transplantation

Microencapsulation of murine leydig tumor cells for cell transplantation. Albert Kwansa - Leader John Harrison - Communicator Yik Ning Wong - BSAC Eric Lee - BWIG Advisor: Professor William Murphy Client: Dr. Craig Atwood. Client Introduction. Dr. Craig Atwood, Geriatrics Research

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Microencapsulation of murine leydig tumor cells for cell transplantation

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  1. Microencapsulation of murine leydig tumor cells for cell transplantation Albert Kwansa - Leader John Harrison - Communicator Yik Ning Wong - BSAC Eric Lee - BWIG Advisor: Professor William Murphy Client: Dr. Craig Atwood

  2. Client Introduction Dr. Craig Atwood, Geriatrics Research ~The Laboratory of Endocrinology, Aging and Disease (LEAD) • Project Motivation: Decrease in testosterone production by leydig cells can disrupt the HPG axis and lead to a variety of disorders.

  3. Background - HPG Axis Hypothalamus - - GnRH LH & FSH Testosterone + Anterior Pituitary - - Target Cells LH FSH Testosterone Inhibin + + Male Gonads Testosterone Leydig Cells Sertoli Cells

  4. Background - Hypogonadism • Primary & Secondary sources • Congenital defects • Acquired disorders • Natural occurrence with aging • Possible symptoms • Bone & muscle atrophy • Reduced mental acuity • Infertility

  5. Microencapsulation • Replace the streroidogenic function of leydig cells • Tiny particles are surrounded by a coating to give small capsules with many useful properties • Immuno-isolation against host response • Criteria for microencapsulation • Sufficient diffusion distance • Provide sustained release of hormone

  6. Parameters • Mesh size • Pore size of hydrogel • Allow diffusion of nutrients, gases, wastes, and hormones • Prevent large immune molecules (antibodies) and cells • Microcapsule diameter • Sufficient diffusion of gases (oxygen) and nutrients • Avoid cell necrosis and hypoxia • Degradation • Remain intact long enough to sustain a critical cell mass and provide adequate hormone release • Thickness • Affect diffusion rate

  7. O HO H n O O PEG PEGdA O O n Material Selection • Polyethylene glycol (PEG) • Synthetic polymer (pure) • Minimize protein adsorption  reduced fibroblast overgrowth • Allows for chemical modification to suit specific purposes • Difficult for cells to adhere

  8. Size exclusion via mesh size LH, FSH, O2, Nutrients Antibodies Testosterone, Wastes Encapsulated leydig cells Pore & Capsule Size • Immunoprotection and Hypoxia • Mesh size of 4-5nm • Human antibodies: 5.4nm (IgG) • FSH(2.2nm), LH(3nm) • Capsule size of 100µm • Rule of thumb • PEGdA (MW 12000)

  9. Past work- Assays • Diffusion into/out-of PEGdA network (BSA-Fluorescein) • Observed diffusion • Cell viability (LIVE/DEAD assay [qualitative]) • Cells viable up to 8 days • Florescence strongly concentrated at the edges of hydrogels • Hypoxia? Immune response? Effect of UV? • Testosterone production (ELISA) • Inconclusive results • Cell anchorage? Effect of UV?

  10. Project Status • Current goal – Extend cell viability and increase testosterone production

  11. Experimental Design Teflon film (spacer) • Diffusion distance • UV exposure • Cell adhesion peptides (RGD) Coverslip hydrogel PEGdA Petri dish bottom

  12. Experimental Protocol

  13. Materials List

  14. Questions?

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