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Tunable and Compartmentalized Multimaterial Bioprinting for Complex Living Tissue Constructs

Authors :
Shabir Hassan
Eduardo Gomez-Reyes
Eduardo Enciso-Martinez
Kun Shi
Jorge Gonzalez Campos
Oscar Yael Perez Soria
Eder Luna-Cerón
Myung Chul Lee
Isaac Garcia-Reyes
Joshua Steakelum
Haziq Jeelani
Luis Enrique García-Rivera
Minsung Cho
Stephanie Sanchez Cortes
Tom Kamperman
Haihang Wang
Jeroen Leijten
Lance Fiondella
Su Ryon Shin
Developmental BioEngineering
TechMed Centre
Source :
ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 14(46), 51602-51618. American Chemical Society
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Recapitulating inherent heterogeneity and complex microarchitectures within confined print volumes for developing implantable constructs that could maintain their structure in vivo has remained challenging. Here, we present a combinational multimaterial and embedded bioprinting approach to fabricate complex tissue constructs that can be implanted postprinting and retain their three-dimensional (3D) shape in vivo. The microfluidics-based single nozzle printhead with computer-controlled pneumatic pressure valves enables laminar flow-based voxelation of up to seven individual bioinks with rapid switching between various bioinks that can solve alignment issues generated during switching multiple nozzles. To improve the spatial organization of various bioinks, printing fidelity with the z-direction, and printing speed, self-healing and biodegradable colloidal gels as support baths are introduced to build complex geometries. Furthermore, the colloidal gels provide suitable microenvironments like native extracellular matrices (ECMs) for achieving cell growths and fast host cell invasion via interconnected microporous networks in vitro and in vivo. Multicompartment microfibers (i.e., solid, core-shell, or donut shape), composed of two different bioink fractions with various lengths or their intravolume space filled by two, four, and six bioink fractions, are successfully printed in the ECM-like support bath. We also print various acellular complex geometries such as pyramids, spirals, and perfusable branched/linear vessels. Successful fabrication of vascularized liver and skeletal muscle tissue constructs show albumin secretion and bundled muscle mimic fibers, respectively. The interconnected microporous networks of colloidal gels result in maintaining printed complex geometries while enabling rapid cell infiltration, in vivo.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19448244
Volume :
14
Issue :
46
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....762aa74abec6b59719e1b63885978bf0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.2c12585