4.7 Review

Developments and Opportunities for 3D Bioprinted Organoids

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOPRINTING
Volume 7, Issue 3, Pages 18-36

Publisher

WHIOCE PUBL PTE LTD
DOI: 10.18063/ijb.v7i3.364

Keywords

Bioprinting; Organoid; Tissue engineering; Organ development

Funding

  1. Key R and D Program of the Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2018YFB1105600/2020YFC2008700/2018YFB11 07000]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [92048205/81902195/82072228]
  3. Project of Shanghai Science and Technology Commission [19XD1434200]
  4. Shanghai Municipal Commission of Economy and Information [202001007]

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Organoids developed from pluripotent stem cells or adult stem cells are three-dimensional cell cultures that mimic certain biological developmental processes of organs, with promising applications in drug screening, disease modeling, and regenerative repair. The challenges facing organoid construction include breakthroughs in scale size, vascularization, reproducibility, and precise architecture. Bioprinting techniques, with the application of bioinks, have accelerated the process of organoid construction, and a multidisciplinary combination of developmental biology, disease pathology, cell biology, and materials science will help overcome obstacles to further develop real organs.
Organoids developed from pluripotent stem cells or adult stem cells are three-dimensional cell cultures possessing certain key characteristics of their organ counterparts, and they can mimic certain biological developmental processes of organs in vitro. Therefore, they have promising applications in drug screening, disease modeling, and regenerative repair of tissues and organs. However, the construction of organoids currently faces numerous challenges, such as breakthroughs in scale size, vascularization, better reproducibility, and precise architecture in time and space. Recently, the application of bioprinting has accelerated the process of organoid construction. In this review, we present current bioprinting techniques and the application of bioinks and summarize examples of successful organoid bioprinting. In the future, a multidisciplinary combination of developmental biology, disease pathology, cell biology, and materials science will aid in overcoming the obstacles pertaining to the bioprinting of organoids. The combination of bioprinting and organoids with a focus on structure and function can facilitate further development of real organs.

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