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4D Bioprinting via Molecular Network Contraction for Membranous Tissue Fabrication

Shannon T. McLoughlin, Abigail Ruth McKenna, John P. Fisher

2023Advanced Healthcare Materials32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Generation of thin membranous tissues (TMT), such as the cornea, epidermis, and periosteum, presents a difficult fabrication challenge in tissue engineering (TE). TMTs consist of several cell layers that are less than 100 µm in thickness per layer. While traditional methods provide the necessary resolution for TMT fabrication, they require significant handling and incorporation of several layers is limited. Extrusion bioprinting offers precise control over deposition of different biomaterials and cell populations within the same construct but lacks the resolution to generate biomimetic TMTs. For the first time, a 4D bioprinting strategy that allows for the generation of cell-laden TMTs is developed. Anionic gelatin methacrylate (GelMA) hydrogels are treated with cationic poly-l-lysine (PLL), which induces charge attraction, microscale network collapse, and macroscale hydrogel shrinking. The impact of shrinking on hydrogel properties, print resolution, and cell viability is presented. Additionally, this work suggests that a novel mechanism is occurring, where PLL exhibits a contractile force on GelMA and PLL molecular weight drives GelMA shrinking capabilities. Finally, it is shown that this phenomenon can occur while maintaining an encapsulated cell population. These findings address a critical barrier by generating macroscale tissue structures with their microscale TMT counterparts in the same print.

Topics & Concepts

3D bioprintingMicroscale chemistryMaterials scienceTissue engineeringFabricationSelf-healing hydrogelsNanotechnologyBiomedical engineeringPolymer chemistryEngineeringMedicinePathologyMathematics educationAlternative medicineMathematics3D Printing in Biomedical ResearchNeuroscience and Neural EngineeringAdditive Manufacturing and 3D Printing Technologies
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