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Research Article

Alginate-matrigel microencapsulated Schwann cells for inducible secretion of glial cell line derived neurotrophic factor

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Pages 487-498 | Received 10 Dec 2007, Accepted 12 Mar 2008, Published online: 17 Apr 2008
 

Abstract

Controlled expression of glial cell line derived neurotrophic factor (Gdnf) can be integrated in the development of a system for repair of injured peripheral nerves. This delivery strategy was demonstrated via inducible Gdnf from microencapsulated cells in barium alginate. The Schwann cell line RT4-D6P2T was initially modified utilizing an ecdysone-based stable transfection system to produce RT4-Gdnf cells. During construct preparation, it was found that C6 cells (where Gdnf cDNA was isolated) make three Gdnf transcript variants. Additionally, the importance of 5′ untranslated region to drive biologically-functional Gdnf synthesis was shown. Encapsulation of RT4-Gdnf in 1% alginate was then performed. It was determined that cells were able to survive at least 1 month in vitro using starting densities of 20, 200 and 2000 cells/capsule and barium ion concentrations of 10, 50, 100 and 200 mM. Most importantly, encapsulated cells secreted exogenous Gdnf upon ponasterone A induction. Mixture of basement membrane extract Matrigel™ to alginate promoted increased proliferation, cell spreading and Gdnf release. Finally, compression tests showed that cell-loaded microcapsules fractured at 75% diameter compression with 38 kPa of stress. Regulated Gdnf release from these microcapsules in vivo may potentially aid in the regeneration of damaged nerves.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank the following Wayne State University facilities for their invaluable help and for allowing us to use their instruments: The DNA Sequencing Facility at Biological Sciences Department, Microscopy Imaging Resources Laboratory at the School of Medicine and Central Instrument Facility of the Chemistry Department. Additionally, we express our gratitude to Dr Timothy Hadden and Dr Jeffrey Loeb for their guidance in Gdnf construct transfection and embryonic neuron culture, respectively.

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