Toward 3D-bioprinting of an endocrine pancreas: A building-block concept for bioartificial insulin-secreting tissue

Author:

Salg Gabriel A1,Poisel Eric1,Neulinger-Munoz Matthias12,Gerhardus Jamina3ORCID,Cebulla Daniel4,Bludszuweit-Philipp Catrin4,Vieira Vitor5ORCID,Nickel Felix1,Herr Ingrid1,Blaeser Andreas3,Giese Nathalia A1,Hackert Thilo1,Kenngott Hannes G1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of General, Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany

2. Department of Dermatology and Allergy, University Hospital LMU Munich, Munich, Germany

3. Technical University of Darmstadt, Institute for BioMedical Printing Technology, Darmstadt, Germany

4. ASD Advanced Simulation and Design GmbH, Rostock, Germany

5. INOVA DE GmbH, Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

Three-dimensional bioprinting of an endocrine pancreas is a promising future curative treatment for patients with insulin secretion deficiency. In this study, we present an end-to-end concept from the molecular to the macroscopic level. Building-blocks for a hybrid scaffold device of hydrogel and functionalized polycaprolactone were manufactured by 3D-(bio)printing. Pseudoislet formation from INS-1 cells after bioprinting resulted in a viable and proliferative experimental model. Transcriptomics showed an upregulation of proliferative and ß-cell-specific signaling cascades, downregulation of apoptotic pathways, overexpression of extracellular matrix proteins, and VEGF induced by pseudoislet formation and 3D-culture. Co-culture with endothelial cells created a natural cellular niche with enhanced insulin secretion after glucose stimulation. Survival and function of pseudoislets after explantation and extensive scaffold vascularization of both hydrogel and heparinized polycaprolactone were demonstrated in vivo. Computer simulations of oxygen, glucose and insulin flows were used to evaluate scaffold architectures and Langerhans islets at a future perivascular transplantation site.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Biomedical Engineering,Biomaterials,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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