ACS Appl Mater Interfaces
May 2020
Injectable hydrogels have attracted much attention in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine for their capability to replace implantation surgeries with a minimally invasive injection procedure and ability to fill irregular defects. The proposed composite ink is a gelatin microgel-based yield-stress and shear-thinning composite material that is injectable and solidifies quickly after injection at room temperature, which can be utilized for the creation of three-dimensional parts in air directly. The gelatin composite ink consists of a microgel solid phase (gelled gelatin microgels) and a cross-linkable solution phase (gelatin solution-based acellular or cellular suspension).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTissue engineering is a rapidly growing field, which requires advanced fabrication technologies to generate cell-laden tissue analogues with a wide range of internal and external physical features including perfusable channels, cavities, custom shapes, and spatially varying material and/or cell compositions. A versatile embedded printing methodology is proposed in this work for creating custom biomedical acellular and cell-laden hydrogel constructs by utilizing a biocompatible microgel composite matrix bath. A sacrificial material is patterned within a biocompatible hydrogel precursor matrix bath using extrusion printing to create three-dimensional features; after printing, the matrix bath is cross-linked, and the sacrificial material is flushed away to create perfusable channels within the bulk composite hydrogel matrix.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
February 2019
Biomedical applications of three-dimensional (3D) printing demand complex hydrogel-based constructs laden with living cells. Advanced support materials facilitate the fabrication of such constructs. This work demonstrates the versatility and utility of a gellan fluid gel as a support bath material for fabricating freeform 3D hydrogel constructs from a variety of materials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Biomater Sci Eng
August 2017
Silk fibroin is a natural protein which has shown great promise for tissue engineering but is not printable due to slow gelation or harsh gelation conditions which are not cell-friendly. In this study, a two-step gelation process is proposed for the printing of silk fibroin, which utilizes alginate as a sacrificial hydrogel during an inkjetting-based process. A cell-laden blend of alginate with silk fibroin is utilized to achieve rapid gelation by calcium alginate formation during printing; it is followed by horseradish peroxidase (HRP) catalyzed covalent cross-linking of the fibroin protein at tyrosine residues after printing.
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