Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
Tyree Foundation Institute of Health Engineering, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
Biomater Sci. 2024 Jul 9;12(14):3522-3549. doi: 10.1039/d4bm00317a.
Neural tissue engineering has emerged as a promising field that aims to create functional neural tissue for therapeutic applications, drug screening, and disease modelling. It is becoming evident in the literature that this goal requires development of three-dimensional (3D) constructs that can mimic the complex microenvironment of native neural tissue, including its biochemical, mechanical, physical, and electrical properties. These 3D models can be broadly classified as self-assembled models, which include spheroids, organoids, and assembloids, and engineered models, such as those based on decellularized or polymeric scaffolds. Self-assembled models offer advantages such as the ability to recapitulate neural development and disease processes , and the capacity to study the behaviour and interactions of different cell types in a more realistic environment. However, self-assembled constructs have limitations such as lack of standardised protocols, inability to control the cellular microenvironment, difficulty in controlling structural characteristics, reproducibility, scalability, and lengthy developmental timeframes. Integrating biomimetic materials and advanced manufacturing approaches to present cells with relevant biochemical, mechanical, physical, and electrical cues in a controlled tissue architecture requires alternate engineering approaches. Engineered scaffolds, and specifically 3D hydrogel-based constructs, have desirable properties, lower cost, higher reproducibility, long-term stability, and they can be rapidly tailored to mimic the native microenvironment and structure. This review explores 3D models in neural tissue engineering, with a particular focus on analysing the benefits and limitations of self-assembled organoids compared with hydrogel-based engineered 3D models. Moreover, this paper will focus on hydrogel based engineered models and probe their biomaterial components, tuneable properties, and fabrication techniques that allow them to mimic native neural tissue structures and environment. Finally, the current challenges and future research prospects of 3D neural models for both self-assembled and engineered models in neural tissue engineering will be discussed.
神经组织工程已成为一个有前途的领域,旨在为治疗应用、药物筛选和疾病建模创建功能性神经组织。文献中越来越明显的是,这一目标需要开发能够模拟天然神经组织复杂微环境的三维(3D)构建体,包括其生化、机械、物理和电学特性。这些 3D 模型可以大致分为自组装模型,包括球体、类器官和组装体,以及工程模型,如基于脱细胞或聚合物支架的模型。自组装模型具有能够再现神经发育和疾病过程的优势,并且能够在更真实的环境中研究不同细胞类型的行为和相互作用的能力。然而,自组装构建体具有缺乏标准化协议、无法控制细胞微环境、难以控制结构特征、可重复性、可扩展性和漫长的开发时间框架等局限性。整合仿生材料和先进制造方法,以在受控的组织架构中为细胞提供相关的生化、机械、物理和电学线索,需要替代的工程方法。工程支架,特别是基于 3D 水凝胶的构建体,具有理想的特性、更低的成本、更高的可重复性、长期稳定性,并且可以快速定制以模拟天然微环境和结构。本综述探讨了神经组织工程中的 3D 模型,特别分析了自组装类器官与基于水凝胶的工程 3D 模型相比的优势和局限性。此外,本文将重点介绍基于水凝胶的工程模型及其生物材料成分、可调特性和制造技术,这些技术允许它们模拟天然神经组织结构和环境。最后,将讨论神经组织工程中自组装和工程模型的 3D 神经模型的当前挑战和未来研究前景。