Publications by authors named "Alison Lawson"

Cryopreservation is important for clinical translation of tissue-engineered constructs. With respect to a pancreatic substitute, encapsulated islets or beta cells have been widely studied for the treatment of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Besides cell viability loss, cryopreservation may affect the function of the remaining viable cells in a pancreatic substitute by altering fundamental processes in glucose-stimulated insulin secretion, such as pathways associated with intermediary metabolism, potentially leading to insulin-secretion defects.

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Long-term storage of natural tissues or tissue-engineered constructs is critical to allow off-the-shelf availability. Vitrification is a method of cryopreservation that eliminates ice formation, as ice may be detrimental to the function of natural or bioartificial tissues. In order to achieve the vitreous state, high concentrations of CPAs must be added and later removed.

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Cryoprotectant (CPA) cytotoxicity constitutes a challenge in developing cryopreservation protocols, specifically in vitrification where high CPA concentrations are necessary to achieve the ice-free, vitreous state. Few cytotoxicity studies have investigated vitrification-relevant concentrations of CPAs, and the benefits and disadvantages of cocktail solutions and of incorporating non-permeating solutes have not been fully evaluated. In this study, we address these issues by determining the cytotoxicity kinetics for dimethylsulfoxide (Me(2)SO) and 1,2-propanediol (PD) on alginate-encapsulated βTC-tet mouse insulinomas for a range of concentrations and temperatures.

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