Adipose tissue engineering using injectable, oxidized alginate hydrogels

Citation:

Kim WS, Mooney DJ, Arany PR, Lee K, Huebsch N, Kim J. Adipose tissue engineering using injectable, oxidized alginate hydrogels. Tissue Eng Part A. 2012;18 (7-8) :737-43.

Date Published:

2012 Apr

Abstract:

Current treatment modalities for soft tissue augmentation which use autologous grafting and commercially available fillers present a number of challenges and limitations, such as donor site morbidity and volume loss over time. Adipose tissue engineering technology may provide an attractive alternative. This study investigated the feasibility of a degradable alginate hydrogel system with commercially available cryopreserved human adipose stem cells (hADSCs) to engineer adipose tissue. hADSCs were differentiated into adipogenic cells, and encapsulated in alginate hydrogels made susceptible to hydrolysis by partial periodate oxidation of the polymer chains. Cell laden gels were subcutaneously injected into the chest wall of male nude mice, and a cell suspension without alginate served as control. After 10 weeks, specimens were harvested and analyzed morphologically, histologically, and with immunoblotting of tissue extractions. Newly generated tissues were semitransparent and soft in all experimental mice, grossly resembling adipose tissue. Analysis using confocal live imaging, immunohistochemisty and western blot analysis revealed that the newly generated tissue was adipose tissue. This study demonstrates that degradable, injectable alginate hydrogels provide a suitable delivery vehicle for preconditioned cryopreserved hADSCs to engineer adipose tissue.