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1.
Adv Mater ; 35(32): e2300756, 2023 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37099802

RESUMO

Major challenges in biofabrication revolve around capturing the complex, hierarchical composition of native tissues. However, individual 3D printing techniques have limited capacity to produce composite biomaterials with multi-scale resolution. Volumetric bioprinting recently emerged as a paradigm-shift in biofabrication. This ultrafast, light-based technique sculpts cell-laden hydrogel bioresins into 3D structures in a layerless fashion, providing enhanced design freedom over conventional bioprinting. However, it yields prints with low mechanical stability, since soft, cell-friendly hydrogels are used. Herein, the possibility to converge volumetric bioprinting with melt electrowriting, which excels at patterning microfibers, is shown for the fabrication of tubular hydrogel-based composites with enhanced mechanical behavior. Despite including non-transparent melt electrowritten scaffolds in the volumetric printing process, high-resolution bioprinted structures are successfully achieved. Tensile, burst, and bending mechanical properties of printed tubes are tuned altering the electrowritten mesh design, resulting in complex, multi-material tubular constructs with customizable, anisotropic geometries that better mimic intricate biological tubular structures. As a proof-of-concept, engineered tubular structures are obtained by building trilayered cell-laden vessels, and features (valves, branches, fenestrations) that can be rapidly printed using this hybrid approach. This multi-technology convergence offers a new toolbox for manufacturing hierarchical and mechanically tunable multi-material living structures.


Assuntos
Bioimpressão , Alicerces Teciduais , Alicerces Teciduais/química , Engenharia Tecidual/métodos , Materiais Biocompatíveis/química , Hidrogéis/química , Impressão Tridimensional , Bioimpressão/métodos
2.
Adv Mater ; 34(15): e2110054, 2022 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35166410

RESUMO

Organ- and tissue-level biological functions are intimately linked to microscale cell-cell interactions and to the overarching tissue architecture. Together, biofabrication and organoid technologies offer the unique potential to engineer multi-scale living constructs, with cellular microenvironments formed by stem cell self-assembled structures embedded in customizable bioprinted geometries. This study introduces the volumetric bioprinting of complex organoid-laden constructs, which capture key functions of the human liver. Volumetric bioprinting via optical tomography shapes organoid-laden gelatin hydrogels into complex centimeter-scale 3D structures in under 20 s. Optically tuned bioresins enable refractive index matching of specific intracellular structures, countering the disruptive impact of cell-mediated light scattering on printing resolution. This layerless, nozzle-free technique poses no harmful mechanical stresses on organoids, resulting in superior viability and morphology preservation post-printing. Bioprinted organoids undergo hepatocytic differentiation showing albumin synthesis, liver-specific enzyme activity, and remarkably acquired native-like polarization. Organoids embedded within low stiffness gelatins (<2 kPa) are bioprinted into mathematically defined lattices with varying degrees of pore network tortuosity, and cultured under perfusion. These structures act as metabolic biofactories in which liver-specific ammonia detoxification can be enhanced by the architectural profile of the constructs. This technology opens up new possibilities for regenerative medicine and personalized drug testing.


Assuntos
Bioimpressão , Bioimpressão/métodos , Gelatina/química , Humanos , Hidrogéis/química , Fígado , Organoides/metabolismo , Impressão Tridimensional , Engenharia Tecidual/métodos , Alicerces Teciduais/química
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