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Acoustic Cell Patterning for Structured Cell-Laden Hydrogel Fibers/Tubules.

Qiu YinYucheng LuoXianglin YuKeke ChenWanlu LiHu HuangLin ZhangYinning ZhouBenpeng ZhuZhichao MaWen-Ming Zhang
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2024)
Cell-laden hydrogel fibers/tubules are one of the fundamentals of tissue engineering. They have been proven as a promising method for constructing biomimetic tissues, such as muscle fibers, nerve conduits, tendon and vessels, etc. However, current hydrogel fiber/tubule production methods have limitations in ordered cell arrangements, thus impeding the biomimetic configurations. Acoustic cell patterning is a cell manipulation method that has good biocompatibility, wide tunability, and is contact-free. However, there are few studies on acoustic cell patterning for fiber production, especially on the radial figure cell arrangements, which mimic many native tissue-like cell arrangements. Here, an acoustic cell patterning system that can be used to produce hydrogel fibers/tubules with tunable cell patterns is shown. Cells can be pre-patterned in the liquid hydrogel before being extruded as cross-linked hydrogel fibers/tubules. The radial patterns can be tuned with different complexities based on the acoustic resonances. Cell viability assays after 72 h confirm good cell viability and proliferation. Considering the biocompatibility and reliability, the present method can be further used for a variety of biomimetic fabrications.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • tissue engineering
  • cell therapy
  • drug delivery
  • stem cells
  • cell proliferation
  • bone marrow
  • cell death
  • quantum dots
  • skeletal muscle
  • energy transfer