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The one-step fabrication of porous hASC-laden GelMa constructs using a handheld printing system

Medicine and Health

The one-step fabrication of porous hASC-laden GelMa constructs using a handheld printing system

S. Jo, J. Lee, et al.

This innovative research introduces a handheld 3D printer designed to create porous, cell-laden methacrylated gelatin constructs, achieving an impressive 97% porosity. Through in vitro and in vivo studies with human adipose stem cells, the authors demonstrated promising results in muscle regeneration, highlighting the method's potential for advancing tissue engineering.... show more
Abstract
The fabrication of highly porous cell-loaded structures in tissue engineering applications has been a challenging issue because non-porous cell-laden struts can cause severe cell necrosis in the middle region owing to poor transport of nutrients and oxygen. In this study, we propose a versatile handheld 3D printer for the effective fabrication of porous cell-laden methacrylated gelatin (GelMa) with high porosity (≈97%) by air injection and a bubble-making system using mesh filters through which a mixture of air/GelMa bioink is passed. In particular, the pore size and foamability of the cell constructs could be manipulated using various processing parameters (rheological properties of GelMa, filter size and number, and air-bioink volume ratio). To demonstrate the feasibility of the cell construct as a tissue engineering substitute for muscle regeneration, in vitro cellular activities and in vivo regeneration ability of human adipose stem cells were assessed. The in vitro results demonstrated that the human adipose stem cells (hASCs) fabricated using the handheld 3D printer were alive and well-proliferated. Furthermore, the in vivo results showed that the hASCs-constructs directly printed from the handheld 3D printer showed significant restoration of functionality and efficient muscle regeneration in the volumetric muscle loss model of mice. Based on these results, the fabrication method of the porous cell-laden construct could be a promising tool for regenerating muscle tissues.
Publisher
npj Regenerative Medicine
Published On
May 17, 2023
Authors
SeoYul Jo, JiUn Lee, Hyeongjin Lee, Dongryeol Ryu, GeunHyung Kim
Tags
3D printing
porous constructs
methacrylated gelatin
tissue regeneration
cell viability
human adipose stem cells
muscle tissue
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