2 research outputs found
One Step Encapsulation of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells in PEG Norbornene Microgels for Therapeutic Actions
Cell
therapies require control over the cellular response under
standardized conditions to ensure continuous delivery of therapeutic
agents. Cell encapsulation in biomaterials can be particularly effective
at providing cells with a uniformly supportive and permissive cell
microenvironment. In this study, two microfluidic droplet device designs
were used to successfully encapsulate equine mesenchymal stromal cells
(MSCs) into photopolymerized polyethylene glycol norbornene (PEGNB)
microscale (∼100–200 μm) hydrogel particles (microgels)
in a single on-chip step. To overcome the slow cross-linking kinetics
of thiol–ene reactions, long dithiol linkers were used in combination
with a polymerization chamber customized to achieve precise retention
time for microgels while maintaining cytocompatibility. Thus, homogeneous
cell-laden microgels could be continuously fabricated in a high-throughput
fashion. Varying linker length mediated both the gel formation rate
and material physical properties (stiffness, mass transport, and mesh
size) of fabricated microgels. Postencapsulation cell viability and
therapeutic indicators of MSCs were evaluated over 14 days, during
which the viability remained at least 90%. Gene expression of selected
cytokines was not adversely affected by microencapsulation compared
to monolayer MSCs. Notably, PEGNB-3.5k microgels rendered significant
elevation in FGF-2 and TGF-β on the transcription level, and
conditioned media collected from these cultures showed robust promotion
in the migration and proliferation of fibroblasts. Collectively, standardized
MSC on-chip encapsulation will lead to informed and precise translation
to clinical studies, ultimately advancing a variety of tissue engineering
and regenerative medicine practices
One Step Encapsulation of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells in PEG Norbornene Microgels for Therapeutic Actions
Cell
therapies require control over the cellular response under
standardized conditions to ensure continuous delivery of therapeutic
agents. Cell encapsulation in biomaterials can be particularly effective
at providing cells with a uniformly supportive and permissive cell
microenvironment. In this study, two microfluidic droplet device designs
were used to successfully encapsulate equine mesenchymal stromal cells
(MSCs) into photopolymerized polyethylene glycol norbornene (PEGNB)
microscale (∼100–200 μm) hydrogel particles (microgels)
in a single on-chip step. To overcome the slow cross-linking kinetics
of thiol–ene reactions, long dithiol linkers were used in combination
with a polymerization chamber customized to achieve precise retention
time for microgels while maintaining cytocompatibility. Thus, homogeneous
cell-laden microgels could be continuously fabricated in a high-throughput
fashion. Varying linker length mediated both the gel formation rate
and material physical properties (stiffness, mass transport, and mesh
size) of fabricated microgels. Postencapsulation cell viability and
therapeutic indicators of MSCs were evaluated over 14 days, during
which the viability remained at least 90%. Gene expression of selected
cytokines was not adversely affected by microencapsulation compared
to monolayer MSCs. Notably, PEGNB-3.5k microgels rendered significant
elevation in FGF-2 and TGF-β on the transcription level, and
conditioned media collected from these cultures showed robust promotion
in the migration and proliferation of fibroblasts. Collectively, standardized
MSC on-chip encapsulation will lead to informed and precise translation
to clinical studies, ultimately advancing a variety of tissue engineering
and regenerative medicine practices