Abstract

Primary dog hepatocytes spontaneously formed spheroids in the pores of polyurethane foam (PUF) within 1-2 days of stationary culture. The spheroids, about 100-150 microm in diameter, partly attached to the surface and immobilized inside these pores. The lidocaine disappearance rate decreased to about 4 microg/10(5) viable cells/day for 10 days, while in the PUF/spheroid culture the rate was maintained at almost the initial level of 8 microg/10(5) viable cells/day for 10 days. Then, two scales of PUF packed-bed modules were designed. A small module (PUF volume; 14.5 cm3) was used for in vitro culture to investigate optimum culture conditions, and a large module (PUF volume; 300 cm3) was designed for dog experiments. Hepatocytes inoculated in these modules also formed spheroids and maintained almost the same activity of albumin secretion rate (111 microg/cm3 PUF/day in the small module and 87.7 microg/cm3 PUF/day in the large module). These results indicate that the PUF packed-bed module containing hepatocyte-spheroids is promising as a hybrid artificial liver.

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