Development of a pancreatic substitute based on genetically engineered intestinal endocrine cells

Cell-based insulin therapies can potentially improve glycemic regulation in insulin dependent diabetes patients and thus help reduce secondary complications. The long-term goal of our work is to engineer autologous insulin-secreting intestinal endocrine cells as a non-beta cell approach to alleviate...

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Main Author: Tiernan, Aubrey Rose
Other Authors: Sambanis, Athanassios
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53987
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-539872015-10-21T03:29:51ZDevelopment of a pancreatic substitute based on genetically engineered intestinal endocrine cellsTiernan, Aubrey RoseDiabetesBioluminescenceIntestinal L cellsPancreatic substituteCell encapsulationCell-based insulin therapies can potentially improve glycemic regulation in insulin dependent diabetes patients and thus help reduce secondary complications. The long-term goal of our work is to engineer autologous insulin-secreting intestinal endocrine cells as a non-beta cell approach to alleviate donor cell shortage and immune rejection issues associated with islet transplantation. These cells have been chosen for their endogenous similarity to beta cells, but generating cell constructs with sufficient insulin secretion for therapeutic effect has proven challenging. Previous work in our lab showed that a tissue engineered pancreatic substitute (TEPS) based on an engineered insulin-secreting L cell line, GLUTag-INS, was insufficient in affecting blood glucose levels in streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice, but promising since human insulin was detected in the blood. The objective of this project was therefore to fabricate an improved TEPS based on GLUTag-INS cells and evaluate its suitability as a standalone diabetes therapy. To achieve this objective, the following specific aims were (1) to investigate gene incorporation as a strategy to enhance recombinant insulin secretion from GLUTag-INS cells; (2) to develop and characterize a TEPS in vitro based on a microcapsule system containing improved GLUTag-INS cells with bioluminescence monitoring capability; and (3) to assess therapeutic efficacy of the graft in a diabetic, immune-competent mouse model and use bioluminescence monitoring to elucidate in vivo transplant behavior. This thesis therefore reports on the progression of studies from the genetic and molecular levels for improved insulin secretion per-cell, to the tissue level for enhanced secretion per-graft, and lastly to the preclinical level for therapeutic assessment in a diabetic mouse model.Georgia Institute of TechnologySambanis, Athanassios2015-09-21T15:51:18Z2015-09-22T05:30:06Z2014-082014-04-28August 20142015-09-21T15:51:18ZDissertationapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/53987en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Diabetes
Bioluminescence
Intestinal L cells
Pancreatic substitute
Cell encapsulation
spellingShingle Diabetes
Bioluminescence
Intestinal L cells
Pancreatic substitute
Cell encapsulation
Tiernan, Aubrey Rose
Development of a pancreatic substitute based on genetically engineered intestinal endocrine cells
description Cell-based insulin therapies can potentially improve glycemic regulation in insulin dependent diabetes patients and thus help reduce secondary complications. The long-term goal of our work is to engineer autologous insulin-secreting intestinal endocrine cells as a non-beta cell approach to alleviate donor cell shortage and immune rejection issues associated with islet transplantation. These cells have been chosen for their endogenous similarity to beta cells, but generating cell constructs with sufficient insulin secretion for therapeutic effect has proven challenging. Previous work in our lab showed that a tissue engineered pancreatic substitute (TEPS) based on an engineered insulin-secreting L cell line, GLUTag-INS, was insufficient in affecting blood glucose levels in streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice, but promising since human insulin was detected in the blood. The objective of this project was therefore to fabricate an improved TEPS based on GLUTag-INS cells and evaluate its suitability as a standalone diabetes therapy. To achieve this objective, the following specific aims were (1) to investigate gene incorporation as a strategy to enhance recombinant insulin secretion from GLUTag-INS cells; (2) to develop and characterize a TEPS in vitro based on a microcapsule system containing improved GLUTag-INS cells with bioluminescence monitoring capability; and (3) to assess therapeutic efficacy of the graft in a diabetic, immune-competent mouse model and use bioluminescence monitoring to elucidate in vivo transplant behavior. This thesis therefore reports on the progression of studies from the genetic and molecular levels for improved insulin secretion per-cell, to the tissue level for enhanced secretion per-graft, and lastly to the preclinical level for therapeutic assessment in a diabetic mouse model.
author2 Sambanis, Athanassios
author_facet Sambanis, Athanassios
Tiernan, Aubrey Rose
author Tiernan, Aubrey Rose
author_sort Tiernan, Aubrey Rose
title Development of a pancreatic substitute based on genetically engineered intestinal endocrine cells
title_short Development of a pancreatic substitute based on genetically engineered intestinal endocrine cells
title_full Development of a pancreatic substitute based on genetically engineered intestinal endocrine cells
title_fullStr Development of a pancreatic substitute based on genetically engineered intestinal endocrine cells
title_full_unstemmed Development of a pancreatic substitute based on genetically engineered intestinal endocrine cells
title_sort development of a pancreatic substitute based on genetically engineered intestinal endocrine cells
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53987
work_keys_str_mv AT tiernanaubreyrose developmentofapancreaticsubstitutebasedongeneticallyengineeredintestinalendocrinecells
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