Litcius/Paper detail

Recent Trends in Biofabrication Technologies for Studying Skeletal Muscle Tissue-Related Diseases

Seungyeun Cho, Jinah Jang

2021Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In native skeletal muscle, densely packed myofibers exist in close contact with surrounding motor neurons and blood vessels, which are embedded in the fibrous connective tissue. In comparison to conventional two-dimensional (2D) cultures, the three-dimensional (3D) engineered skeletal muscle models allow structural and mechanical resemblance with native skeletal muscle tissue by providing geometric confinement and physiological matrix stiffness to the cells. In addition, various external stimuli applied to these models enhance muscle maturation along with cell–cell and cell–extracellular matrix interaction. Therefore, 3D in vitro muscle models can adequately recapitulate the pathophysiologic events occurring in tissue–tissue interfaces inside the native skeletal muscle such as neuromuscular junction. Moreover, 3D muscle models can induce pathological phenotype of human muscle dystrophies such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy by incorporating patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells and human primary cells. In this review, we discuss the current biofabrication technologies for modeling various skeletal muscle tissue-related diseases (i.e., muscle diseases) including muscular dystrophies and inflammatory muscle diseases. In particular, these approaches would enable the discovery of novel phenotypic markers and the mechanism study of human muscle diseases with genetic mutations.

Topics & Concepts

BiofabricationSkeletal muscleExtracellular matrixMyocyteInduced pluripotent stem cellBiologyDuchenne muscular dystrophyMuscular dystrophyMuscle tissueConnective tissueMuscle disorderITGA7Cell biologyTissue engineeringAnatomyPathologyMedicineGeneticsEmbryonic stem cellInternal medicineGene3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchMuscle Physiology and DisordersTissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine