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A Print-and-Fuse Strategy for Sacrificial Filaments Enables Biomimetically Structured Perfusable Microvascular Networks with Functional Endothelium Inside 3D Hydrogels

Authors :
Matthias Ryma
Hatice Genç
Ali Nadernezhad
Ilona Paulus
Dominik Schneidereit
Oliver Friedrich
Kristina Andelovic
Stefan Lyer
Christoph Alexiou
Iwona Cicha
Jürgen Groll
Source :
Advanced Materials
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

A facile and flexible approach for the integration of biomimetically branched microvasculature within bulk hydrogels is presented. For this, sacrificial scaffolds of thermoresponsive poly(2-cyclopropyl-2-oxazoline) (PcycloPrOx) are created using melt electrowriting (MEW) in an optimized and predictable way and subsequently placed into a customized bioreactor system, which is then filled with a hydrogel precursor solution. The aqueous environment above the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of PcycloPrOx at 25 °C swells the polymer without dissolving it, resulting in fusion of filaments that are deposited onto each other (print-and-fuse approach). Accordingly, an adequate printing pathway design results in generating physiological-like branchings and channel volumes that approximate Murray's law in the geometrical ratio between parent and daughter vessels. After gel formation, a temperature decrease below the LCST produces interconnected microchannels with distinct inlet and outlet regions. Initial placement of the sacrificial scaffolds in the bioreactors in a pre-defined manner directly yields perfusable structures via leakage-free fluid connections in a reproducible one-step procedure. Using this approach, rapid formation of a tight and biologically functional endothelial layer, as assessed not only through fluorescent dye diffusion, but also by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) stimulation, is obtained within three days.

Details

ISSN :
15214095
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advanced Materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....93e542f02eba30cce94206ef68833c64
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202200653