Injectable transplantation system for anticancer in-situ cell therapy

Cancer is the leading cause of death worldwide. Traditional cancer therapy methods include surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or combinations of them all. In recent years, immunotherapy, as a novel therapeutic method by which the immune system is used to reject specific cancer. In this project...

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Main Author: Sheng, Nan.
Other Authors: Wang Dongan
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/16682
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-166822023-03-03T15:40:45Z Injectable transplantation system for anticancer in-situ cell therapy Sheng, Nan. Wang Dongan School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Chemical engineering::Biotechnology Cancer is the leading cause of death worldwide. Traditional cancer therapy methods include surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or combinations of them all. In recent years, immunotherapy, as a novel therapeutic method by which the immune system is used to reject specific cancer. In this project, we are aiming to evaluate the feasibility of remodeling immunosurveillance into the tumor site, with an engineering, more particularly, functional materials-mediated cell therapeutic strategy by designing an injectable cell transplantation system for anti-cancer therapy. The RAW 264.7 cells are encapsulated in dual-layer hydrogel composite which is in injectable size. Followed by biochemical activation, the construct is able to constantly release therapeutic agent. In a long observation period, the cells inside the capsule gradually die in a spontaneous manner, which is regarded as an advantage of controllability. The expression of a series of cytokines is switched on or up-regulated to induce the apoptosis of tumor cells. The different cell viability tests including live-dead assay, apoptosis test and WST-1 assay suggest that the tumor cells which are cocultured with post 6 hours LPS challenge agarose encapsulated constructs exhibit distinctively decreased levels of cell viability. Bachelor of Engineering (Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering) 2009-05-28T02:06:08Z 2009-05-28T02:06:08Z 2009 2009 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/16682 en Nanyang Technological University 69 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Chemical engineering::Biotechnology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Chemical engineering::Biotechnology
Sheng, Nan.
Injectable transplantation system for anticancer in-situ cell therapy
description Cancer is the leading cause of death worldwide. Traditional cancer therapy methods include surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or combinations of them all. In recent years, immunotherapy, as a novel therapeutic method by which the immune system is used to reject specific cancer. In this project, we are aiming to evaluate the feasibility of remodeling immunosurveillance into the tumor site, with an engineering, more particularly, functional materials-mediated cell therapeutic strategy by designing an injectable cell transplantation system for anti-cancer therapy. The RAW 264.7 cells are encapsulated in dual-layer hydrogel composite which is in injectable size. Followed by biochemical activation, the construct is able to constantly release therapeutic agent. In a long observation period, the cells inside the capsule gradually die in a spontaneous manner, which is regarded as an advantage of controllability. The expression of a series of cytokines is switched on or up-regulated to induce the apoptosis of tumor cells. The different cell viability tests including live-dead assay, apoptosis test and WST-1 assay suggest that the tumor cells which are cocultured with post 6 hours LPS challenge agarose encapsulated constructs exhibit distinctively decreased levels of cell viability.
author2 Wang Dongan
author_facet Wang Dongan
Sheng, Nan.
format Final Year Project
author Sheng, Nan.
author_sort Sheng, Nan.
title Injectable transplantation system for anticancer in-situ cell therapy
title_short Injectable transplantation system for anticancer in-situ cell therapy
title_full Injectable transplantation system for anticancer in-situ cell therapy
title_fullStr Injectable transplantation system for anticancer in-situ cell therapy
title_full_unstemmed Injectable transplantation system for anticancer in-situ cell therapy
title_sort injectable transplantation system for anticancer in-situ cell therapy
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/16682
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