INJECTION MOLDING TO GENERATE COMPLEX HYDROGEL GEOMETRIES FOR CELL ENCAPSULATION
20210146010 · 2021-05-20
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29C33/306
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A61L2300/62
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C12N5/0677
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C08L5/12
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61L27/18
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B29C2045/0094
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C12N2535/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61L27/3804
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B29C33/42
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29K2995/006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A61L27/54
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B29L2031/753
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A61L27/18
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B29C45/64
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C39/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C08L5/12
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B29C45/2673
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
A61L27/18
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61L27/54
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
Provided herein is a cell macroencapsulation device composed of hydrogel in a 3D conformation that optimizes encapsulated cell viability and function when transplanted into a vascularized tissue space. The hydrogel macroencapsulation device is intended to reduce or eliminate immune response to the cell graft, while allowing exchange of encapsulated cell-secreted products, such as insulin. Also described herein is an injection-mold and fabrication process to generate the hydrogel macroencapsulation devices for use in the clinic.
Claims
1. A hydrogel macroencapsulation device comprising: a biocompatible hydrogel operable to be crosslinked within an injection mold; and a plurality of cells encapsulated within the hydrogel, wherein the hydrogel macroencapsulation device is formed from the injection mold, and wherein the hydrogel macroencapsulation device has a geometry such that the plurality of cells encapsulated in the hydrogel are within 100 μm to 3000 μm from the edge of the hydrogel.
2. The hydrogel macroencapsulation device of claim 1, wherein the hydrogel crosslinks within 1-60 minutes.
3. The hydrogel macroencapsulation device of claim 1, wherein the biocompatible hydrogel is multi-arm PEG functionalized with bioorthogonal reactive groups.
4. The hydrogel macroencapsulation device of claim 1, wherein the plurality of cells comprises islets.
5. The hydrogel macroencapsulation device of claim 1, wherein the geometry of the hydrogel macroencapsulation device is a spiral, a wrinkled sheet, a planar sheet, branched, or vascular.
6. An injection mold device for forming a hydrogel macroencapsulation device, comprising: a bottom portion comprising one or more channels; and a top portion comprising complementary one or more channels to the channels in the bottom portion, wherein when the bottom portion and top portion are connected together, they form a three-dimensional geometry with a diameter of 100 μm to 3000 μm.
7. The injection mold device of claim 6, wherein the three-dimensional geometry is a spiral, a wrinkled sheet, a planar sheet, branched, or vascular.
8. The injection mold device of claim 6, wherein the one or more channels form an inlet on an outside surface of the injection mold device.
9. The injection mold device of claim 6, wherein the one or more channels end in an air vent.
10. The injection mold device of claim 9, wherein the air vent extends from an end of the one or more channels to an opening on an outside surface of the injection mold device.
11. The injection mold device of claim 6, further comprising a middle portion comprising one or more channels, wherein the middle portion is operable to connect between the top portion and the bottom portion.
12. The injection mold device of claim 6, wherein the bottom portion and the top portion are connected together by magnets or a clamp.
13. The injection mold device of claim 12, wherein the top portion comprises one or more recessions on a top outer surface and the bottom portion each comprises one or more recessions on a bottom outer surface, and where in the clamp comprises two arms, each comprising one or more projections operable to connect to the one or more recessions on the top portion and the bottom portion.
14. A kit for forming a hydrogel macroencapsulation device comprising: the injection mold device of claim 6; and a biocompatible hydrogel operable to be crosslinked within the injection mold.
15. The kit of claim 14, further comprising a plurality of cells encapsulated within the hydrogel.
16. The kit of claim 15, wherein the plurality of cells comprises islets.
17. The kit of claim 14, wherein the biocompatible hydrogel is multi-arm PEG functionalized with bioorthogonal reactive groups.
18. The kit of claim 14, wherein the hydrogel macroencapsulation device is formed from the injection mold.
19. The kit of claim 18, wherein the hydrogel macroencapsulation device has a geometry such that the plurality of cells encapsulated in the hydrogel are within 100 μm to 3000 μm from the edge of the hydrogel.
20. A method of transplanting cells into a patient in need thereof, the method comprising: mixing a biocompatible hydrogel with a plurality of cells; injecting the mixture into an injection mold device with a three-dimensional geometry having a diameter of 100 μm to 3000 μm; crosslinking the hydrogel to form a hydrogel macroencapsulation device; removing the injection mold device after the hydrogel has crosslinked; and implanting the hydrogel macroencapsulation device into the patient.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
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[0084] Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding elements among the view of the drawings. The headings used in the figures do not limit the scope of the claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0085] The present disclosure provides devices and kits for encapsulating cells within a hydrogel. The present disclosure also provides methods for transplanting islet cells using a hydrogel macroencapsulation device. An advantage of the devices and methods disclosed herein is that they allow for the formation of complex geometries to provide optimal oxygenation to the cells. Another advantage is bedside implementation of cell encapsulation. Other aspects of the device and methods of the present disclosure are described more thoroughly below.
[0086] Several definitions that apply throughout this disclosure will now be presented. As used herein, “about” refers to numeric values, including whole numbers, fractions, percentages, etc., whether or not explicitly indicated. The term “about” generally refers to a range of numerical values, for instance, ±0.5-1%, ±1-5% or ±5-10% of the recited value, that one would consider equivalent to the recited value, for example, having the same function or result.
[0087] The term “comprising” means “including, but not necessarily limited to”; it specifically indicates open-ended inclusion or membership in a so-described combination, group, series and the like. The terms “comprising” and “including” as used herein are inclusive and/or open-ended and do not exclude additional, unrecited elements or method processes. The term “consisting essentially of” is more limiting than “comprising” but not as restrictive as “consisting of.” Specifically, the term “consisting essentially of” limits membership to the specified materials or steps and those that do not materially affect the essential characteristics of the claimed invention.
[0088] As islets exhibit oxygen consumption rates up to 1000-fold higher than other cell types, the primary limitation of macroencapsulation devices is adequate oxygenation of encapsulated islets due to isolation from high oxygen vascular tissue in order to prevent immune recognition. As such, it is critical that islet macroencapsulation devices are designed for optimal geometry with respect to oxygen distribution, prioritizing device designs which minimize distance between islet and vascular tissue, thereby maximizing device oxygenation. Spatial oxygen gradients within cell macroencapsulation devices represent a critical barrier to the translation of islet replacement therapy in the absence of an immunosuppressive drug regimen.
[0089] Macroencapsulation device designs which limit diffusion distances also confer the benefit of minimal excess material, resulting in high cell density devices that have greater potential to scale to larger animal models or humans. For example, microencapsulation with a typical capsule size of 1 mm diameter, with a maximal cell density of 3 islets per capsule, results in 140 mL of material and cell graft volume. This quantity of material limits transplantation to large sites such as the intraperitoneal cavity. By comparison, a spiral macroencapsulation device of the same 1 mm diameter but 254 cm length results in maximal volume of 2 mL at a comparable cell density. The geometry improves oxygen gradients, and the 10-fold reduction in volume results in greater flexibility in transplantation site, potentially enabling transplantation in highly vascularized tissue such as the omentum. Proximity to highly vascularized tissue maximizes oxygen tension at the surface, and therefore maximizes device internal oxygenation. Additionally, typical microencapsulation techniques require specialized equipment by a trained user, which reduces the wide-spread use of this technique. Alternatively, an injection-molding strategy may enable fabrication of complex device geometries, and facilitate facile implementation in the clinic, as this technique minimizes specialized equipment or training required for device fabrication.
[0090] Provided herein are a multi-component injection mold device, a hydrogel macroencapsulation device, and a kit including the injection mold device and the hydrogel for creating the hydrogel macroencapsulation device with embedded cells. The hydrogel macroencapsulation device created using the injection mold device may have a three-dimensional (3D), complex geometry that provides adequate oxygenation to the embedded cells after implantation in the body. The hydrogel macroencapsulation device may utilize hydrogel reaction schemes specific for use with the injection mold to allow the hydrogel to be fully injected into the injection mold before the hydrogel crosslinks.
[0091] I. Hydrogel Macroencapsulation Device
[0092] Provided herein is a hydrogel macroencapsulation device to house and support cells for transplantation and physically isolate the cells from the recipient immune system. The macroencapsulation device may house and support cells for transplantation, and shield them from direct antigen recognition by the recipient immune system. A primary limitation of previous macroencapsulation device iterations is their oxygen transport properties, which limit survival of transplanted cells. The hydrogel macroencapsulation device may have any geometry that reduces oxygen diffusion distances within the device sufficiently to preserve and maintain cell viability and function. For example, geometric device designs may be selected based on performance in finite element modeling of device oxygen profile. In some examples, the hydrogel macrencapsulation device may have a spiral shape, as seen in
[0093] In some examples, cells within the hydrogel may be within about 100 μm to about 3000 μm from the edge of the hydrogel, providing sufficient oxygenation to the cells encapsulated within the device. In various examples, the cells within the hydrogel may be within about 100 μm, 150 μm, 200 μm, 250 μm, 300 μm, 350 μm, 400 μm, 450 μm, 500 μm, 550 μm, 600 μm, 650 μm, 700 μm, 750 μm, 800 μm, 850 μm, 900 μm, 950 μm, 1000 μm, 1500 μm, 2000 μm, 2500 μm, 3000 μm from the edge of the hydrogel, or any range between these values.
[0094] In some examples, the channel or channels forming the complex geometry of the hydrogel macroencapsulation device may have a diameter of about 100 μm to about 3000 μm. In various examples, the channel or channels forming the complex geometry of the hydrogel macroencapsulation device may have a diameter of about 100 μm, 150 μm, 200 μm, 250 μm, 300 μm, 350 μm, 400 μm, 450 μm, 500 μm, 550 μm, 600 μm, 650 μm, 700 μm, 750 μm, 800 μm, 850 μm, 900 μm, 950 μm, 1000 μm, 1500 μm, 2000 μm, 2500 μm, 3000 μm, or any range between these values.
[0095] The hydrogel macroencapsulation device may have a size of up to about 10 cm by 10 cm. In some embodiments, the hydrogel macroencapsulation device may have a size of up to about 8.3 cm by 8.3 cm. In at least one example, the hydrogel macroencapsulation device may have a size of up to about 6 cm by 6 cm. In some examples, the height of the hydrogel macroencapsulation device may range from about 1 μm to about 3 cm. In at least one example, the hydrogel macroencapsulation device may have a height of about 1 mm. The hydrogel macroencapsulation device may be sized for implantation in a human.
[0096] The hydrogel macroencapsulation device includes a hydrogel polymer and a plurality of cells to be encapsulated within the hydrogel. The plurality of cells may include any cell to be transplanted within a patient's body. In at least one example, the cells to be encapsulated and/or transplanted includes islets. In some examples, the hydrogel may encapsulate a range of cell densities between about 1 islet equivalent (IEQ)/μL and about 50 IEQ/μL. The cell density in the hydrogel may be about 1 IEQ/μL, up to about 10 IEQ/μL, up to about 20 IEQ/μL, up to about 30 IEQ/μL, up to about 40 IEQ/μL, up to about 50 IEQ/μL, or any range between these values. In some examples, the hydrogel macroencapsulation device may include a maximum of 100,000 IEQ cells per device to limit loss of cell viability and function. The typical yield of islets from a human pancreas ranges from 200,000-600,000 IEQ. As such, a single islet transplantation may require between 2-6 hydrogel macroencapsulation devices. In some examples, the multiple hydrogel macroencapsulation devices may be stacked. The macroencapsulation devices may be stacked directly on top of each other. The macroencapsulation devices may be stacked in a variety of orientations. The macroencapsulation devices may be stacked vertically with or without rotation, with or without translation, with or without reflection, or with or without resizing of each subsequent layer. In some examples, the multiple hydrogel macroencapsulation devices may be placed side by side. In other examples, the macroencapsulation devices may be placed side by side and stacked, in any combination.
[0097] In some examples, the hydrogel macroencapsulation device may protect encapsulated allogeneic cells from physical contact with the host immune response, maximize cell viability and function through optimization of geometry and encapsulating material, and which prioritizes facile device implementation in the clinic and automation and scale-up by fabrication via injection molding. In an example, the hydrogel macroencapsulation device may be designed for delivery to defined transplant sites, and for retrievability to maximize device safety. An example application is islet transplantation, where allogeneic insulin producing cells are protected from immune attack by the hydrogel encapsulation material. The hydrogel macroencapsulation device may have a complex geometry, created by using an injection mold device with the complex geometry.
[0098] The hydrogel may be suitable for use in the injection molding scheme. The hydrogel may have a highly controlled and tunable matrix design and crosslinking. In some examples, to generate hydrogels within injection molds, a cell-compatible hydrogel crosslinking scheme is needed with reaction kinetics in the range of 1-60 minutes, and good in vivo stability. In various examples, the biocompatible hydrogel may crosslink within 1 minute, 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 15 minutes, 20 minutes, 25 minutes, 30 minutes, 40 minutes, 50 minutes, or 60 minutes. Biocompatible synthetic or natural hydrogels may be used to form the hydrogel macroencapsulation device. Non-limiting examples of hydrogels for forming the hydrogel macroencapsulation device include poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG), agarose, and alginate. In at least one example, PEG may be used due to their tenability and reproducibility in manufacturing and scaling. Typical synthetic hydrogel matrices are designed for in situ use, necessitating fast-polymerizing polymers. However, hydrogels with slower polymerization rates may be beneficial in an injection molding scheme, where sufficient time is required to mix components and inject into the mold. Advantages over faster-crosslinking hydrogels include greater uniformity and homogeneity in final hydrogel product crosslinking, expected to result in greater consistency of performance in vivo. In some examples, the macroencapsulation device may utilize a PEG bioorthogonal reaction scheme, which has high biocompatibility and crosslinks under conditions such that it may be used with the injection mold.
[0099] Table 1 provides a library of compatible hydrogel reaction schemes that may be deployed within the injection mold. In some examples, hydrogel components may include (1) multi-arm PEG macromer, in the range of 10-50 kDa, functionalized with bioorthogonal reactive groups (Table 1), (2) bioactive molecules, peptides and proteins to support cell function and viability, including any bioactive factors that can be bound to the matrix, and (3) crosslinker(s) with reactive groups corresponding to the bioorthogonal reacted groups listed in Table 1, with either a nondegradable spacer (PEG 0.5-10 kDa), or a proteolitically degradable peptide. Non-limiting examples of bioactive molecules, peptides, and proteins include peptide adhesive ligands (e.g. RGD, GFOGER, IKVAV), bioactive molecules (e.g. VEGF, PDGF-BB, and other signaling proteins), and immunomodulatory agents (e.g. HLA-G, galectin-1, galectin-3, etc.).
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Reactive group Abbreviation Bio-orthogonal reactive group tetrazine norbonene NB (E)-cyclooct-4-enol TCO azide dibenzocyclooctyne DBCO azidodibenzocyclooctyne ADIBO dibenzoazacyclooctyne DIBAC difluorocyclooctyne 2 DIFO2 difluorocyclooctyne 3 DIFO2 bicyclononyne BCN thiol maleimide MAL iodoacetamide IODO Polymer backbone 4-arm poly(ethylene glycol), 10-80 kDa Alginate Agarose
[0100] In some examples, the hydrogel may include a vasculogenic hydrogel to encourage vascularization at the macroencapsulation device surface. Maximal oxygenation within the hydrogel macroencapsulation device is dependent upon the oxygen levels of tissue at the surface of the device. The higher the density of oxygen-rich vascular networks at the surface of the device, the higher the oxygenation within the device. Therefore, the optimal configuration of this invention would include a coating of vasculogenic degradable hydrogel at the device surface upon implantation.
[0101] II. Injection Mold Device
[0102] Provided herein is a multi-component injection mold device to fabricate hydrogel macroencapsulation devices of complex geometries. The complex geometries are needed for macroencapsulation to provide adequate oxygenation of encapsulated cells. However, because hydrogels need time to crosslink, forming complex geometries has previously been difficult without complex equipment and skilled implementation (e.g. 3D printing, light activated crosslinking). The injection mold device allows for the creation of complex hydrogel geometries without complex equipment or skilled implementation. In some examples, the injection mold device may provide a mold in which to form a hydrogel into a complex geometry, such as a spiral, blood vessel branches, a capillary bed, or any other three-dimensional geometry. Using an injection mold, the hydrogel may have sufficient time to crosslink prior to removal of the mold.
[0103] In some embodiments, the injection mold device is used to form a hydrogel macroencapsulation device. The injection mold generates hydrogels of complex 3D shapes in a clinically translatable manner. In some examples, the injection mold includes assembled mold parts and a custom clamp to secure the mold during hydrogel crosslinking. The injection mold may include a two-part design (top and bottom sections) or three-part design (top, middle, and bottom sections). In some examples, the sections of the injection mold may be held together with magnets or a clamp. In some examples, the injection mold and clamp may be fabricated via 3D printing. In other examples, commercially-made device components may be injection molded and mass produced. The injection mold may be scaled for automated and reproducible construct fabrication.
[0104] Example injection mold device designs are exhibited in
[0105] In some embodiments, as seen in
[0106] In some embodiments, the injection mold device 100 may further include a middle portion 108 having one or more channels 106, where the middle portion 108 is operable to connect between a top portion 102 and a bottom portion 104, as seen in
[0107] The one or more channels 106 in the top portion, bottom portion, and/or middle portion may form an inlet 112 in the side of the injection mold device 100 when the top portion 102, the bottom portion 104, and/or the middle portion 108 are connected together. The hydrogel with cells may be injected into the injection mold device 100 through the inlet 112. Cells are mixed with solubilized hydrogel components, provided per device, at an appropriate density. In some embodiments, the inlet may be operable to receive a multicomponent injection port for use with multicomponent hydrogels in injection molds, as seen in
[0108]
[0109] The top portion 102, the bottom portion 104, and/or the middle portion 108 may be connected together using magnets to generate a seal between the mold components. In some examples, the top portion 102, the bottom portion 104, and/or middle portion 108 may be press fit together. In various embodiments, the top portion 102, the bottom portion 104, and/or the middle portion 108 may be held together using a clamp 200. The clamps are operable to create a sufficient seal on the injection mold device so there is not leakage of the hydrogel when injecting it. The clamp 200 may include two clamp arms 202 operable to clamp the top portion, the bottom portion, and/or the middle portion together. In some embodiments, the top portion 102 and/or the bottom portion 104 may include one or more recessions 110 on an outer surface (see
[0110] The top portion 102, middle portion 108, and or bottom portion 104 of the injection mold device may have a square or rectangular cross section. For example, the injection mold device may have a square cross section, as seen in
[0111] In various examples, the channel or channels 106 in the top portion 102, middle portion 108, and/or bottom portion 104 of the injection mold device 100 may have a diameter of about 100 μm, 150 μm, 200 μm, 250 μm, 300 μm, 350 μm, 400 μm, 450 μm, 500 μm, 550 μm, 600 μm, 650 μm, 700 μm, 750 μm, 800 μm, 850 μm, 900 μm, 950 μm, 1000 μm, 1500 μm, 2000 μm, 2500 μm, 3000 μm, or any range between these values. In some examples, the one or more channels may have a diameter of about 0.5 mm, about 1 mm, about 2 mm, or about 3 mm. The channel 106 may vary in diameter. For example, the diameter of the channel 106 may be wider near the inlet 112 than throughout the rest of the top portion 102 or bottom portion 104, as seen in
[0112] In various examples, the top portion 102, middle portion 108, and/or bottom portion 104 of the injection mold device 100 may have a length and/or width of about 10 mm, about 15 mm, about 20 mm, about 25 mm, about 30 mm, about 35 mm, about 40 mm, about 45 mm, about 50 mm, or any range between these values.
[0113] III. Macroencapsulation Kit
[0114] Further provided herein is a macroencapsulation kit that includes the hydrogel components, as well as the injection mold device. In an example, the mold and the hydrogel components may be provided as an off-the-shelf kit, deployable in the clinic by a trained user. In an example, the macroencapsulation kit may be readily manufactured, shipped, and stored until time of use in the clinic. For example, when a cadaveric donor organ source of cells (e.g. islets) becomes available, the macroencapsulation kit may be used to fabricate hydrogel macroencapsulation devices at the transplant recipient bedside under aseptic conditions.
[0115] In some examples, the kit may further include a syringe and/or clamp to secure the injection mold. The hydrogel-cell mixture may be injected into the injection mold using the syringe, mold, and clamp. After a prescribed amount of time, the injection mold device may be released from the clamp, opened, and the hydrogel macroencapsulation device transferred to the patient.
[0116] Injection molding readily scales for high-throughput manufacturing of products. Methods to generate large scale stem cell-derived cell sources are in development. As such, this cell technology may be paired with the injection molding hydrogel encapsulation strategy within a high-throughput and automated manufacturing process. This would enable large-scale manufacturing of devices to treat disease, such as insulin-dependent diabetic patients.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Finite Element Modeling Macroencapsulation Device Design and Device Prototyping
[0117] Devices were designed using finite element modeling of oxygen distribution throughout the device to determine optimal structure for encapsulated cell long-term viability and function. 3D printed injection molds were designed, fabricated, and tested for feasibility of facile use in the clinic. Concurrently, a material library was evaluated for use as a biostable synthetic encapsulation hydrogel with adequate crosslinking time for use in injection molding. Predictive modeling of macroencapsulation device transport resulted in device designs that maximize encapsulated islet viability and function, while 3D printing enabled facile and rapid prototyping of injection molds.
[0118] Rather than the typical trial-and-error approach to device design, an in silico evaluation of device oxygenation prior to fabrication and testing in vitro streamlined prototyping and improved macroencapsulated islet function and viability. Alternative geometries that aim to minimize oxygen diffusion distances and eliminate suboptimal oxygen gradients include geometries such as the spiral and crimped sheet, as illustrated in
[0119] 3D printing technology enabled rapid prototyping of device molds for injection-molded hydrogel designs. A stereolithography 3D printer (Formlabs) was used to print molds in Elastic resin, a resin with physical properties comparable to poly(dimethyl siloxane) (PDMS), an ideal material for injection molding hydrogels. Example 3D models are pictured in
[0120]
[0121] Concurrently with injection mold optimization via 3D printing, a library of synthetic encapsulation materials were evaluated, selecting for candidates that are (1) of optimal biostability and (2) ideal crosslinking times for injection molding (˜1-30 min). The collection of proposed reactive groups (
Example 2: Evaluation of Device Performance In Vitro
[0122] Optimal device designs were evaluated with continuous beta cell line INS-1 (single cells) in vitro for cell function and viability. Predictive device design may result in optimal short- and long-term function in vivo.
[0123] It should be understood from the foregoing that, while particular embodiments have been illustrated and described, various modifications can be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Such changes and modifications are within the scope and teachings of this invention as defined in the claims appended hereto.