Drop-on-demand printing of cells and materials for designer tissue constructs

Abstract Adapting bottom-up approaches to tissue engineering is a real challenge. Since the first application of fused deposition modeling for tissue engineering scaffolds, considerable effort has been focused on printing synthetic biodegradable scaffolds. Concurrently a variety of rapid prototyping techniques have been developed to define macroscopically the shapes of deposited biomaterials, including photolithography, syringe-based gel deposition, and solid freeform fabrication. These designed scaffolds have shown promise in regenerating tissues at least equivalent to other scaffolding methods. An exciting advance in scaffold aided tissue regeneration is presented here, that of cell and organ printing, which allows direct printing of cells and proteins within 3D hydrogel structures. Cell printing opens the possibility to programmed deposition of scaffold structure and cell type, thus controlling the type of tissue that can be regenerated within the scaffold. Several examples of printed tissues will be presented including contractile cardiac hybrids. The hybrid materials have properties that can be tailored in 3D to achieve desired porosities, mechanical and chemical properties. The materials include alginate hydrogels with controlled microshell structures that can be built by spraying cross-linkers onto ungelled alginic acid. Endothelial cells were seen to attach to the inside of these microshells. The cells remained viable in constructs as thick as 1 cm due to the programmed porosity. Finite element modeling was used to predict the mechanical properties and to generate CAD models with properties matching cardiac tissue. These results suggest that the printing method could be used for hierarchical design of functional cardiac patches, balanced with porosity for mass transport and structural support.

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