3.8 Article

Bioengineering the Liver: Scale-Up and Cool Chain Delivery of the Liver Cell Biomass for Clinical Targeting in a Bioartificial Liver Support System

Journal

BIORESEARCH OPEN ACCESS
Volume 2, Issue 1, Pages 1-11

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/biores.2012.0286

Keywords

alginate encapsulation; fluidized bed bioreactor; HepG2 cells

Funding

  1. Department of Health [L005] Funding Source: Medline
  2. National Institutes of Health Research (NIHR) [L005] Funding Source: National Institutes of Health Research (NIHR)

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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 similar to 500 mu m spherical beads containing cells at similar to 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 similar to 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 x 10(10) cells were produced in 1100mL of beads. This process is scalable to human size ([0.7-1] x 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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