Otto H. York Chemical and Materials Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, 161 Warren Street, 150 Tiernan Hall, Newark, NJ 07102 USA.
Otto H. York Chemical and Materials Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, 161 Warren Street, 150 Tiernan Hall, Newark, NJ 07102 USA; Department of Biomedical Engineering, New Jersey Institute of Technology, United States.
Acta Biomater. 2019 Sep 1;95:214-224. doi: 10.1016/j.actbio.2019.02.038. Epub 2019 Mar 1.
3D bioprinting is an emerging manufacturing approach to fabricate (cell-laden) hydrogel constructs with embedded microchannels, which are potentially useful for fundamental studies to understand vascularization and angiogenesis, and for developing organ-on-a-chip devices for disease modeling. Although numerous printing approaches have been developed, novel approaches are still needed that enable printing of channels with user-defined and tunable size, morphology, and complexity. Here, we report a novel bioprinting approach enabling printing of a sacrificial ink within commonly used photocurable hydrogels using a sequential printing approach. To achieve this, photocurable hydrogel is printed layer-by-layer as usual, but each layer is exposed to light briefly (seconds) to create partially crosslinked, self-supporting layers. At a desired thickness, immediately after the layer is printed (prior to partial crosslinking step), sacrificial hydrogel is directly printed within this viscous uncrosslinked layer. The layer was then exposed to light to confine and support the sacrificial hydrogel. After fully crosslinking the system, the sacrificial hydrogel is washed away, forming a channel. This approach allows bioprinting of cells with the matrix material and seeding of cells into channels after the sacrificial ink is removed. This approach can potentially provide a robust platform for fabricating vascularized tissues and studying cell behaviors on diverse channel surfaces. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: 3D bioprinting is an emerging platform for the fabrication of hydrogel-based constructs for in vitro tissue/disease modelling or tissue and organ printing. Although several approaches have been developed to print channels within these constructs, it is still challenging to incorporate microchannels (for vascularization) within 3D bioprinted constructs. This study presents a novel bioprinting approach to create user-defined and tunable channels embedded within cell-laden hydrogel constructs. We report an important advance as our approach does not require complex device modifications for bioprinters or complex synthesis and processing hurdles for the inks. Since our approach does not require special chemistries, there are potentially a greater number of commercially available options for ink materials.
3D 生物打印是一种新兴的制造方法,可以制造(细胞负载)具有嵌入式微通道的水凝胶结构,这对于理解血管生成和血管生成的基础研究以及开发用于疾病建模的器官芯片设备非常有用。尽管已经开发了许多打印方法,但仍然需要新的方法来实现具有用户定义和可调尺寸、形态和复杂性的通道打印。在这里,我们报告了一种新的生物打印方法,该方法使用顺序打印方法在常用光固化水凝胶内打印牺牲墨水。为了实现这一点,通常按层打印光固化水凝胶,但每层仅暴露于光下几秒钟以创建部分交联的自支撑层。在所需的厚度处,在层打印后(在部分交联步骤之前),立即将牺牲水凝胶直接打印到该粘性未交联层内。然后将该层暴露于光下以限制和支撑牺牲水凝胶。在系统完全交联后,将牺牲水凝胶洗掉,形成通道。这种方法允许在基质材料中打印细胞,并在去除牺牲墨水后将细胞播种到通道中。这种方法可以为制造血管化组织和研究不同通道表面上的细胞行为提供一个稳健的平台。意义声明:3D 生物打印是制造用于体外组织/疾病建模或组织和器官打印的水凝胶基构建体的新兴平台。尽管已经开发了几种在这些构建体中打印通道的方法,但在 3D 生物打印构建体中嵌入微通道(用于血管生成)仍然具有挑战性。本研究提出了一种新的生物打印方法来创建嵌入式细胞负载水凝胶构建体中的用户定义和可调通道。我们报告了一个重要的进展,因为我们的方法不需要对生物打印机进行复杂的设备修改,也不需要对墨水进行复杂的合成和处理障碍。由于我们的方法不需要特殊的化学物质,因此对于油墨材料,可能有更多的商业上可用的选择。