4.6 Article

Capillary-like Formations of Endothelial Cells in Defined Patterns Generated by Laser Bioprinting

Journal

MICROMACHINES
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/mi12121538

Keywords

bioprinting; laser; capillaries; vascularization; endothelial cells; tissue engineering; biofabrication

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 project PLATFORMA [951890]
  2. German Cluster of Excellence Ex62/2 Rebirth

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Bioprinting is a promising technique for tissue engineering, aiming to produce whole organs in the future. However, creating thick tissue with functional vascular networks, including capillaries, presents challenges, as current methods often result in randomly patterned small vessels.
Bioprinting is seen as a promising technique for tissue engineering, with hopes of one day being able to produce whole organs. However, thick tissue requires a functional vascular network, which naturally contains vessels of various sizes, down to capillaries of ~10 mu m in diameter, often spaced less than 200 mu m apart. If such thick tissues are to be printed, the vasculature would likely need to be printed at the same time, including the capillaries. While there are many approaches in tissue engineering to produce larger vessels in a defined manner, the small capillaries usually arise only in random patterns by sprouting from the larger vessels or from randomly distributed endothelial cells. Here, we investigated whether the small capillaries could also be printed in predefined patterns. For this purpose, we used a laser-based bioprinting technique that allows for the combination of high resolution and high cell density. Our aim was to achieve the formation of closed tubular structures with lumina by laser-printed endothelial cells along the printed patterns on a surface and in bioprinted tissue. This study shows that such capillaries are directly printable; however, persistence of the printed tubular structures was achieved only in tissue with external stimulation by other cell types.

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