AI Article Synopsis

  • Cells are highly influenced by their surrounding environment, including the properties of the culture medium and nearby materials, which can greatly affect their behavior and biocompatibility.
  • High-resolution 3D printing technology allows for the rapid creation of customizable devices for biotechnology, but many materials used in 3D printing are not suitable for biomedical applications.
  • This study presents a new polyacrylic 3D printing material that has shown promising results for cell cultivation, supporting cell viability and growth while also enabling optical monitoring for experiments.

Article Abstract

Cells are very sensitive to their direct environment-they place high demands, for example, on ambient culture medium, adjacent cell types, and the properties of surrounding material parts. As a result, mechanical and physical material properties-such as surface roughness, swelling, electrostatic effects, etc-can all have a significant impact on cell behaviour. In addition, a material's composition also impacts whether that material meets biocompatibility requirements and can thus be considered for potential use in biomedical applications. The entry of high-resolution 3D printing technology in biotechnology has opened the door to individually-designed experiment-adaptable devices of almost unlimited complexity that can be manufactured within just a few hours. 3D printing materials are frequently lacking in the characteristics that make them suitable for biomedical applications, however. This study introduces a high-resolution polyacrylic 3D printing material as a potential alternative material for use in cultivation systems with indirect or direct contact to cells. Viability analyses, studies of apoptotic/necrotic cell death response, and surface studies all suggest that this material meets the requirements for (in vitro) biocompatibility, and has surface properties sufficient to permit uninhibited cell proliferation for cells in direct contact to the material. Moreover, the translucency of this material facilitates the type of optical monitoring required for performing experiments in a microfluidic environment, or for facilitating microscopic observations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-605X/ab8e97DOI Listing

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