Thiol-Gelatin-Norbornene Bioink for Laser-Based High-Definition Bioprinting.
Agnes DobosJasper Van HoorickWolfgang SteigerPeter GruberMarica MarkovicOrestis G AndriotisAndreas RohatschekPeter DubruelPhilipp J ThurnerSandra Van VlierbergheStefan BaudisAleksandr OvsianikovPublished in: Advanced healthcare materials (2019)
Two-photon polymerization (2PP) is a lithography-based 3D printing method allowing the fabrication of 3D structures with sub-micrometer resolution. This work focuses on the characterization of gelatin-norbornene (Gel-NB) bioinks which enables the embedding of cells via 2PP. The high reactivity of the thiol-ene system allows 2PP processing of cell-containing materials at remarkably high scanning speeds (1000 mm s-1 ) placing this technology in the domain of bioprinting. Atomic force microscopy results demonstrate that the indentation moduli of the produced hydrogel constructs can be adjusted in the 0.2-0.7 kPa range by controlling the 2PP processing parameters. Using this approach gradient 3D constructs are produced and the morphology of the embedded cells is observed in the course of 3 weeks. Furthermore, it is possible to tune the enzymatic degradation of the crosslinked bioink by varying the applied laser power. The 3D printed Gel-NB hydrogel constructs show exceptional biocompatibility, supported cell adhesion, and migration. Furthermore, cells maintain their proliferation capacity demonstrated by Ki-67 immunostaining. Moreover, the results demonstrate that direct embedding of cells provides uniform distribution and high cell loading independently of the pore size of the scaffold. The investigated photosensitive bioink enables high-definition bioprinting of well-defined constructs for long-term cell culture studies.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- atomic force microscopy
- cell cycle arrest
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- signaling pathway
- high speed
- drug delivery
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell adhesion
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- stem cells
- cell therapy
- wound healing
- cell proliferation
- single molecule
- monte carlo