3.8 Article

Collagen Microparticle-Mediated 3D Cell Organization: A Facile Route to Bottom-up Engineering of Thick and Porous Tissues

Journal

ACS BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING
Volume 3, Issue 9, Pages 2144-2154

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsbiomaterials.7b00131

Keywords

tissue engineering; collagen; microparticle; membrane emulsification; cytochrome P450; hepatocyte

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology of Japan [16H04571, 26350530, 23106007, 15J06315, 16J40041]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H03463, 16H04571, 26350530, 15J06315, 16J40041] Funding Source: KAKEN

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In closely packed artificial 3D cellular constructs, cells located near the center of the constructs are not functional because of the limited supply of oxygen and nutrition. Here we describe a simple, unique, and highly versatile approach to organizing cells into thick but porous 3D tissues, using cell-sized collagen microparticles as particulate scaffolds. When cells and particles are mixed and seeded in a noncell-adhesive planar chamber, they gather to form sheet-shaped structures with a thickness of 100-150 mu m. In the construct, uniformly distributed particles work as a binder between cells and modulate the strong intercellular contraction. We confirmed that several factors, including the particle/cell ratio and particle size, critically affect the stability and shrink behaviors of porous tissues prepared using mouse embryonic fibroblasts (NIH-3T3 cells). Cross-sectional observation, together with cell proliferation and viability assays, revealed that the cells composing the tissues are functional primarily because interior pores between cells/particles worked as a path for efficient molecular transport. Furthermore, we prepared thick cell tissues of a liver model using human hepatocarcinoma cells (HepG2 cells), and confirmed that liver-specific functions were upregulated when composite tissues were formed using collagen microparticles prepared with several different stabilization protocols by glutaraldehyde, genipin, and methyl acetate). The process presented would be highly useful in enabling one-step production of thick cellular constructs in which porosity and morphology are tunable.

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