4.8 Article

Dual-Material 3D-Printed Intestinal Model Devices with Integrated Villi-like Scaffolds

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 49, Pages 58434-58446

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c22185

Keywords

3D tissue models; intestinal barrier; villi; multi-material 3D printing; stereolithography; hydrogels

Funding

  1. Novo Nordisk Foundation [NNF16OC0022166]

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In vitro small intestinal models aim to mimic the in vivo intestinal function and structure, while accurate and scalable models are crucial for advancing the development of orally administered pharmaceutical products. Utilizing stereolithographic 3D printing, this study demonstrates the manufacture of biocompatible hydrogel scaffolds with villi-like micropillar arrays, supporting a month-long culture that induces polarization of Caco-2 epithelial cell layers along the villus axis. This dual-material 3D micromanufacturing technology shows potential for functional demonstrations such as monitoring compound-induced challenges to the epithelial barrier integrity using high-throughput analysis tools.
In vitro small intestinal models aim to mimic the in vivo intestinal function and structure, including the villi architecture of the native tissue. Accurate models in a scalable format are in great demand to advance, for example, the development of orally administered pharmaceutical products. Widely used planar intestinal cell monolayers for compound screening applications fail to recapitulate the three-dimensional (3D) microstructural characteristics of the intestinal villi arrays. This study employs stereolithographic 3D printing to manufacture biocompatible hydrogel-based scaffolds with villi-like micropillar arrays of tunable dimensions in poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylates (PEGDAs). The resulting 3D-printed microstructures are demon-strated to support a month-long culture and induce apicobasal polarization of Caco-2 epithelial cell layers along the villus axis, similar to the native intestinal microenvironment. Transport analysis requires confinement of compound transport to the epithelial cell layer within a compound diffusion-closed reservoir compartment. We meet this challenge by sequential printing of PEGDAs of different molecular weights into a monolithic device, where a diffusion-open villus-structured hydrogel bottom supports the cell culture and mass transport within the confines of a diffusion-closed solid wall. As a functional demonstrator of this scalable dual-material 3D micromanufacturing technology, we show that Caco-2 cells seeded in villi-wells form a tight epithelial barrier covering the villi-like micropillars and that compound-induced challenges to the barrier integrity can be monitored by standard high-throughput analysis tools (fluorescent tracer diffusion and transepithelial electrical resistance).

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