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Bioengineering the Liver: Scale-Up and Cool Chain Delivery of the Liver Cell Biomass for Clinical Targeting in a Bioartificial Liver Support System
Author(s) -
Eloy Erro,
James Bundy,
Isobel Massie,
SherriAnn Chalmers,
A. Gautier,
Spyridon Gerontas,
Mike Hoare,
Peter J. Sharratt,
Sarah Choudhury,
Marcin Lubowiecki,
I. P. Llewellyn,
Cécile Legallais,
Barry Fuller,
Humphrey Hodgson,
Clare Selden
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
bioresearch open access
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2164-7860
pISSN - 2164-7844
DOI - 10.1089/biores.2012.0286
Subject(s) - bioartificial liver device , cell , liver function , liver cell , viability assay , cell encapsulation , cell therapy , liver regeneration , biomedical engineering , regeneration (biology) , tissue engineering , medicine , chemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , hepatocyte , biochemistry , in vitro
Acute liver failure has a high mortality unless patients receive a liver transplant; however, there are insufficient donor organs to meet the clinical need. The liver may rapidly recover from acute injury by hepatic cell regeneration given time. A bioartificial liver machine can provide temporary liver support to enable such regeneration to occur. We developed a bioartificial liver machine using human-derived liver cells encapsulated in alginate, cultured in a fluidized bed bioreactor to a level of function suitable for clinical use (performance competence). HepG2 cells were encapsulated in alginate using a JetCutter to produce ∼500 μm spherical beads containing cells at ∼1.75 million cells/mL beads. Within the beads, encapsulated cells proliferated to form compact cell spheroids (AELS) with good cell-to-cell contact and cell function, that were analyzed functionally and by gene expression at mRNA and protein levels. We established a methodology to enable a ∼34-fold increase in cell density within the AELS over 11-13 days, maintaining cell viability. Optimized nutrient and oxygen provision were numerically modeled and tested experimentally, achieving a cell density at harvest of >45 million cells/mL beads; >5×10(10) cells were produced in 1100 mL of beads. This process is scalable to human size ([0.7-1]×10(11)). A short-term storage protocol at ambient temperature was established, enabling transport from laboratory to bedside over 48 h, appropriate for clinical translation of a manufactured bioartificial liver machine.

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