4.7 Article

In vitro and in vivo characterization of a novel tricalcium silicate-based ink for bone regeneration using laser-assisted bioprinting

Journal

BIOFABRICATION
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1758-5090/ac584b

Keywords

tricalcium silicate; ink; bioink; laser-assisted bioprinting; bone repair; tissue engineering; in vivo

Funding

  1. Fondation des Gueules Cassees, Paris-France
  2. Fondation de l'Avenir, Paris-France
  3. Institut Francais pour la Recherche Odontologique
  4. Societe Odontologique de Paris (Bourse Michel Degrange)

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Laser-assisted bioprinting (LAB) offers high resolution and reproducibility for bone regeneration. This study developed a tricalcium silicate-based solidifying ink for bone repair and demonstrated its cytocompatibility and potential to promote bone volume formation in vitro and in vivo. However, LAB techniques with this ink failed to achieve complete bone repair.
Grafts aside, current strategies employed to overcome bone loss still fail to reproduce native tissue physiology. Among the emerging bioprinting strategies, laser-assisted bioprinting (LAB) offers very high resolution, allowing designing micrometric patterns in a contactless manner, providing a reproducible tool to test ink formulation. To this date, no LAB associated ink succeeded to provide a reproducible ad integrum bone regeneration on a murine calvaria critical size defect model. Using the Conformite Europeenne (CE) approved BioRoot RCS (R) as a mineral addition to a collagen-enriched ink compatible with LAB, the present study describes the process of the development of a solidifying tricalcium silicate-based ink as a new bone repair promoting substrates in a LAB model. This ink formulation was mechanically characterized by rheology to adjust it for LAB. Printed aside stromal cells from apical papilla (SCAPs), this ink demonstrated a great cytocompatibility, with significant in vitro positive impact upon cell motility, and an early osteogenic differentiation response in the absence of another stimulus. Results indicated that the in vivo application of this new ink formulation to regenerate critical size bone defect tends to promote the formation of bone volume fraction without affecting the vascularization of the neo-formed tissue. The use of LAB techniques with this ink failed to demonstrate a complete bone repair, whether SCAPs were printed or not of at its direct proximity. The relevance of the properties of this specific ink formulation would therefore rely on the quantity applied in situ as a defect filler rather than its cell modulation properties observed in vitro. For the first time, a tricalcium silicate-based printed ink, based on rheological analysis, was characterized in vitro and in vivo, giving valuable information to reach complete bone regeneration through formulation updates. This LAB-based process could be generalized to normalize the characterization of candidate ink for bone regeneration.

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