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  4. Anti-fibrotic effect of ketoprofen-grafted alginate microcapsules in the transplantation of insulin producing cells
 
research article

Anti-fibrotic effect of ketoprofen-grafted alginate microcapsules in the transplantation of insulin producing cells

Noverraz, Francois Rémi Pierre  
•
Montanari, Elisa
•
Pimenta, Joël
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May 22, 2018
Bioconjugate Chemistry

The controlled release of small molecular modulators of the immune response from hydrogel microspheres (MS) used for cell immobilization is an attractive approach to reduce pericapsular fibrotic overgrowth (PFO) after transplantation. Ketoprofen is a well-known non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug involved in the early stage inflammation cascade. PEGylated derivatives of ketoprofen, presenting either ester or amide linkage to the drug, were synthesized and conjugated to the hydroxyl groups of sodium alginate (Na-alg). Functionalized cell-free and MIN6 cells containing MS were produced from the resulting modified alginates. In vitro quantification of ketoprofen release indicated regular and sustained drug delivery over 14 days, resulting from the hydrolytic cleavage of the ester bond. The release kinetics was enhanced over the initial 7 days by the presence of MIN6 cells, probably as a result of cell esterase activity. In the presence of amide bond, traces of ketoprofen were released over 14 days due to a much slower hydrolysis kinetics. Cell-free and MIN6 cells containing MS were transplanted in immune-competent mice, either in the peritoneal cavity or under the kidney capsule, with a follow-up period of 30 days. Comparison with non-modified Ca-alg MS transplanted in the same conditions demonstrated a clear reduction in the severity of PFO for MS functionalized with ketoprofen. Quantification of collagen deposition on MIN6 cells containing MS transplanted under the kidney capsule revealed the significant effect of ketoprofen release to decrease fibrotic tissue formation. The impact was more pronounced when the drug was covalently conjugated by an ester linkage, allowing higher concentration of the anti-inflammatory compound to be delivered at the transplantation site. The functionality of microencapsulated MIN6 cells 30 days after transplantation was confirmed by detection of insulin positive cell content.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.8b00190
Author(s)
Noverraz, Francois Rémi Pierre  
Montanari, Elisa
Pimenta, Joël
Szabó, Luca  
Ortiz Trujillo, Daniel  
Gonelle-Gispert, Carmen
Bühler, Léo H
Gerber-Lemaire, Sandrine
Date Issued

2018-05-22

Published in
Bioconjugate Chemistry
Volume

29

Issue

6

Start page

1932

End page

1941

Subjects

Alginate derivatives

•

Antifibrotic effect

•

Biocompatibility

•

Cell microencapsulation

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Controlled release

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Covalent grafting

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Fibrosis

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Functionalized hydrogels

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Ketoprofen

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SCI-SB-SG  
FunderGrant Number

FNS

CR23I2_152974

FNS

310030E-164250

Swiss foundations

Insuleman Foundation Grant

Available on Infoscience
May 24, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/146610
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