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Organ printing: fiction or science.

Authors :
Jakab K
Neagu A
Mironov V
Forgacs G
Source :
Biorheology [Biorheology] 2004; Vol. 41 (3-4), pp. 371-5.
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Aggregates of living cells (i.e. model tissue fragments) under appropriate conditions fuse like liquid drops. According to Steinberg's differential adhesion hypothesis (DAH), this may be understood by assuming that cells are motile and tissues made of such cells possess an effective surface tension. Here we show that based on these properties three-dimensional cellular structures of prescribed shape can be constructed by a novel method: cell aggregate printing. Spherical aggregates of similar size made of cells with known adhesive properties were prepared. Aggregates were embedded into biocompatible gels. When the cellular and gel properties, as well as the symmetry of the initial configuration were appropriately adjusted the contiguous aggregates fused into ring-like organ structures. To elucidate the driving force and optimal conditions for this pattern formation, Monte Carlo simulations based on a DAH motivated model were performed. The simulations reproduced the experimentally observed cellular arrangements and revealed that the control parameter of pattern evolution is the gel-tissue interfacial tension, an experimentally accessible parameter.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0006-355X
Volume :
41
Issue :
3-4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biorheology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
15299269