Mu Xuan, Agostinacchio Francesca, Xiang Ning, Pei Ying, Khan Yousef, Guo Chengchen, Cebe Peggy, Motta Antonella, Kaplan David L
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Tufts University, Medford, MA 02155, USA.
Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Trento, via Sommarive 9, Trento 38123, Italy.
Prog Polym Sci. 2021 Apr;115. doi: 10.1016/j.progpolymsci.2021.101375. Epub 2021 Feb 16.
Three-dimensional (3D) printing is a transformative manufacturing strategy, allowing rapid prototyping, customization, and flexible manipulation of structure-property relationships. Proteins are particularly appealing to formulate inks for 3D printing as they serve as essential structural components of living systems, provide a support presence in and around cells and for tissue functions, and also provide the basis for many essential ex vivo secreted structures in nature. Protein-based inks are beneficial in vivo due to their mechanics, chemical and physical match to the specific tissue, and full degradability, while also to promoting implant-host integration and serving as an interface between technology and biology. Exploiting the biological, chemical, and physical features of protein-based inks can provide key opportunities to meet the needs of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. Despite these benefits, protein-based inks impose nontrivial challenges to 3D printing such as concentration and rheological features and reconstitution of the structural hierarchy observed in nature that is a source of the robust mechanics and functions of these materials. This review introduces photo-crosslinking mechanisms and rheological principles that underpins a variety of 3D printing techniques. The review also highlights recent advances in the design, development, and biomedical utility of monolithic and composite inks from a range of proteins, including collagen, silk, fibrinogen, and others. One particular focus throughout the review is to introduce unique material characteristics of proteins, including amino acid sequences, molecular assembly, and secondary conformations, which are useful for designing printing inks and for controlling the printed structures. Future perspectives of 3D printing with protein-based inks are also provided to support the promising spectrum of biomedical research accessible to these materials.
三维(3D)打印是一种变革性的制造策略,可实现快速原型制作、定制以及对结构-性能关系的灵活操控。蛋白质特别适合用于配制3D打印墨水,因为它们是生命系统的重要结构成分,在细胞内外提供支持并参与组织功能,也是自然界中许多重要的体外分泌结构的基础。基于蛋白质的墨水在体内具有诸多益处,这归因于其力学性能、与特定组织的化学和物理匹配性以及完全可降解性,同时还能促进植入物与宿主的整合,并充当技术与生物学之间的界面。利用基于蛋白质的墨水的生物学、化学和物理特性,可为满足组织工程和再生医学的需求提供关键机遇。尽管有这些优点,但基于蛋白质的墨水给3D打印带来了诸多挑战,比如浓度、流变学特性以及重构自然界中观察到的结构层次,而这种结构层次是这些材料强大力学性能和功能的来源。本文综述介绍了支撑多种3D打印技术的光交联机制和流变学原理。综述还重点介绍了来自一系列蛋白质(包括胶原蛋白、丝蛋白、纤维蛋白原等)的整体式和复合式墨水在设计、开发及生物医学应用方面的最新进展。贯穿综述的一个特别关注点是介绍蛋白质独特的材料特性,包括氨基酸序列、分子组装和二级构象,这些特性有助于设计打印墨水和控制打印结构。本文还提供了基于蛋白质的墨水进行3D打印的未来展望,以支持利用这些材料开展的前景广阔的生物医学研究。