Engineered Microfibers for Tissue Engineering.
Riguga SuYongjian AiJingyu WangLei WuHua SunMingyu DingRuoxiao XieQionglin LiangPublished in: ACS applied bio materials (2024)
Hydrogel microfibers are hydrogel materials engineered into fiber structures. Techniques such as wet spinning, microfluidic spinning, and 3D bioprinting are often used to prepare microfibers due to their ability to precisely control the size, morphology, and structure of the microfibers. Microfibers with different structural morphologies have different functions; they provide a flow-through culture environment for cells to improve viability, and can also be used to induce the differentiation of cells such as skeletal muscle and cardiac muscle cells to eventually form functional organs in vitro through special morphologies. This Review introduces recent advances in microfluidics, 3D bioprinting, and wet spinning in the preparation of microfibers, focusing on the materials and fabrication methods. The applications of microfibers in tissue engineering are highlighted by summarizing their contributions in engineering biomimetic blood vessels, vascularized tissues, bone, heart, pancreas, kidney, liver, and fat. Furthermore, applications of engineered fibers in tissue repair and drug screening are also discussed.
Keyphrases
- tissue engineering
- induced apoptosis
- skeletal muscle
- cell cycle arrest
- heart failure
- drug delivery
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- oxidative stress
- emergency department
- cell death
- type diabetes
- gene expression
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- high throughput
- insulin resistance
- single cell
- bone mineral density
- fatty acid
- body composition
- tandem mass spectrometry
- low cost