3.8 Article

A Visible Light-Cross-Linkable, Fibrin-Gelatin-Based Bioprinted Construct with Human Cardiomyocytes and Fibroblasts

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 5, Issue 9, Pages 4551-4563

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.9b00505

Keywords

fibrinogen; thrombin; furfuryl-gelatin; biofabrication; 3D bioprinting; cardiac tissue

Funding

  1. Stem Cell Network
  2. Canada Research Chairs program
  3. NSERC
  4. MITACS
  5. British Columbia Innovation Council
  6. NIH [1SC2HL134642-01]
  7. NSF-PREM [DMR 1827745]
  8. NIH BUILD Pilot [8UL1GM118970-02]

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In this study, fibrin was added to a photo-polymerizable gelatin-based bioink mixture to fabricate cardiac cell-laden constructs seeded with human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (iPS-CM) or CM cell lines with cardiac fibroblasts (CF). The extensive use of platelet-rich fibrin, its capacity to offer patient specificity, and the similarity in composition to surgical glue prompted us to include fibrin in the existing bioink composition. The cell-laden bioprinted constructs were cross-linked to retain a herringbone pattern via a two-step procedure including the visible light cross-linking of furfuryl-gelatin followed by the chemical cross-linking of fibrinogen via thrombin and calcium chloride. The printed constructs revealed an extremely porous, networked structure that afforded long-term in vitro stability. Cardiomyocytes printed within the sheet structure showed excellent viability, proliferation, and expression of the troponin I cardiac marker. We extended the utility of this fibrin-gelatin bioink toward coculturing and coupling of CM and cardiac fibroblasts (CF), the interaction of which is extremely important for maintenance of normal physiology of the cardiac wall in vivo. This enhanced cardiac construct can be used for drug cytotoxicity screening or unraveling triggers for heart diseases in vitro.

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