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Tailored Melt Electrowritten Scaffolds for the Generation of Sheet-Like Tissue Constructs from Multicellular Spheroids.

Rebecca McMasterChristiane HoefnerAndrei HrynevichCarina BlumMiriam WiesnerKatharina WittmannTim R DargavillePetra Bauer-KreiselJürgen GrollPaul D DaltonTorsten Blunk
Published in: Advanced healthcare materials (2019)
Melt electrowriting (MEW) is an additive manufacturing technology that is recently used to fabricate voluminous scaffolds for biomedical applications. In this study, MEW is adapted for the seeding of multicellular spheroids, which permits the easy handling as a single sheet-like tissue-scaffold construct. Spheroids are made from adipose-derived stromal cells (ASCs). Poly(ε-caprolactone) is processed via MEW into scaffolds with box-structured pores, readily tailorable to spheroid size, using 13-15 µm diameter fibers. Two 7-8 µm diameter "catching fibers" near the bottom of the scaffold are threaded through each pore (360 and 380 µm) to prevent loss of spheroids during seeding. Cell viability remains high during the two week culture period, while the differentiation of ASCs into the adipogenic lineage is induced. Subsequent sectioning and staining of the spheroid-scaffold construct can be readily performed and accumulated lipid droplets are observed, while upregulation of molecular markers associated with successful differentiation is demonstrated. Tailoring MEW scaffolds with pores allows the simultaneous seeding of high numbers of spheroids at a time into a construct that can be handled in culture and may be readily transferred to other sites for use as implants or tissue models.
Keyphrases
  • tissue engineering
  • cell proliferation
  • poor prognosis
  • high glucose
  • clinical trial
  • binding protein
  • diabetic rats
  • smoking cessation
  • endothelial cells
  • long non coding rna
  • single molecule