4.6 Article

3D bioprinting and microscale organization of vascularized tissue constructs using collagen-based bioink

Journal

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
Volume 118, Issue 8, Pages 3150-3163

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.27838

Keywords

additive manufacturing; bioink; bioprinting; stem cells; tissue engineering; vascularized tissue

Funding

  1. National Additive Manufacturing Innovation Cluster (NAMIC) [2017068]
  2. Agency for Science, Technology, and Research (A*STAR, Singapore) Advanced Manufacturing and Engineering Individual Research Grant (AME IRG) [A1883c0013]

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Bioprinting technology has made significant progress over the past decade, particularly in developing larger and more physiologic tissues. By precisely combining biological scaffold materials and cells in three-dimensional space, bioprinting has the potential to assist in locating endothelial cells in specific spatial positions to promote vessel formation in predefined areas.
Bioprinting three-dimensional (3D) tissue equivalents have progressed tremendously over the last decade. 3D bioprinting is currently being employed to develop larger and more physiologic tissues, and it is of particular interest to generate vasculature in biofabricated tissues to aid better perfusion and transport of nutrition. Having an advantage over manual culture systems by bringing together biological scaffold materials and cells in precise 3D spatial orientation, bioprinting could assist in placing endothelial cells in specific spatial locations within a 3D matrix to promote vessel formation at these predefined areas. Hence, in the present study, we investigated the use of bioprinting to generate tissue-level capillary-like networks in biofabricated tissue constructs. First, we developed a bioink using collagen type-1 supplemented with xanthan gum (XG) as a thickening agent. Using a commercial extrusion-based multi-head bioprinter and collagen-XG bioink, the component cells were spatially assembled, wherein the endothelial cells were bioprinted in a lattice pattern and sandwiched between bioprinted fibroblasts layers. 3D bioprinted constructs thus generated were stable, and maintained structural shape and form. Post-print culture of the bioprinted tissues resulted in endothelial sprouting and formation of interconnected capillary-like networks within the lattice pattern and between the fibroblast layers. Bioprinter-assisted spatial placement of endothelial cells resulted in fabrication of patterned prevascularized constructs that enable potential regenerative applications in the future.

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