4.7 Article

Viscous Fingering as a Rapid 3D Pattering Technique for Engineering Cell-Laden Vascular-Like Constructs

Journal

ADVANCED HEALTHCARE MATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/adhm.202101392

Keywords

GelMA; patterning techniques; vascular tissue engineering; viscous fingering

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan [MOST 107-2221-E-007-067-MY3, MOST 109-2628-E-007-001-MY3]

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A patterning technique called viscous fingering has been developed to bioengineer vascularized-like tissues within minutes. By manipulating the physical properties of the base gel, the spreading and growth direction of embedded cells can be successfully controlled and guided.
Tissues are much larger than the diffusion limit distance, so rapidly providing blood vessels to supply embedded cells inside tissues with sufficient nutrients and oxygen is regarded as a major strategy for the success of bioengineered large and thick tissue constructs. Here, a patterning technique, viscous fingering, is developed to bioengineer vascularized-like tissues within a few minutes. By controlling viscosity, flow rate, and the volume of photo-cross-linkable prepolymer, macro- and microscale vascular network structures can be precisely engineered using the Hele-Shaw cell that is designed in this study. After cross-linking, a vascular-like gel with fingering structures is formed between the bottom and top base gels, creating a sandwich-like structure. Cells can be incorporated into the fingers, bases, or both gels. The spreading and growth direction of the embedded cells are successfully controlled and guided by manipulating the physical properties of the fingering and base gels individually. Moreover, fingering is generated, connected, and surrounded prepared cell-laden microgels in base prepolymers to form prevascularized tissue-like constructs. Taken together, the 3D cell patterning technique extends the potential for modeling and fabricating large and stackable vascularized tissue-like constructs for both ex vivo and in vivo applications.

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