| Literature DB >> 27465860 |
Enrico Guermani1, Hossein Shaki2,3, Soumyaranjan Mohanty4, Mehdi Mehrali2, Ayyoob Arpanaei5, Akhilesh K Gaharwar6,7, Alireza Dolatshahi-Pirouz2.
Abstract
Development of tissue engineering scaffolds with native-like biology and microarchitectures is a prerequisite for stem cell mediated generation of off-the-shelf-tissues. So far, the field of tissue engineering has not full-filled its grand potential of engineering such combinatorial scaffolds for engineering functional tissues. This is primarily due to the many challenges associated with finding the right microarchitectures and ECM compositions for optimal tissue regeneration. Here, we have developed a new microgel array to address this grand challenge through robotic printing of complex stem cell-laden microgel arrays. The developed microgel array platform consisted of various microgel environments that where composed of native-like cellular microarchitectures resembling vascularized and bone marrow tissue architectures. The feasibility of our array system was demonstrated through localized cell spreading and osteogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) into complex tissue-like structures. In summary, we have developed a tissue-like microgel array for evaluating stem cell differentiation within complex and heterogeneous cell microenvironments. We anticipate that the developed platform will be used for high-throughput identification of combinatorial and native-like scaffolds for tissue engineering of functional organs.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27465860 PMCID: PMC4964594 DOI: 10.1038/srep30445
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Fabrication of hydrogel microgel arrays.
Schematic of the fabrication process showing the deposition of cell-laden pre-polymers (HA or GelMA) on functionalized glass slides (Epoxy or TMSPMA). The pre-polymer solution was crosslinking either though thiol-ene reaction (HA-PEG)) or through a UV-irradiation step (GelMA). UV-exposure time was 15 sec and two different HA crosslinker concentrations was used (1% and 0.5%) (Illustration made by Jeffrey Aarons).
Figure 2Cell viability inside printed microgels.
(a) Fluorescence images of dead (red) and live (green) hMSCs. (b) hMSCs viability, (c) number of live hMSCs and (d) number of dead hMSCs. GelMA viability data are taken with permission from ref. 25.
Figure 3Cell spreading and differentiation within the deposited microgels.
(a) Fluorescence images of hMSCs within the printed microgels. (b) Optical image of ALP stained gel microgel array and (c) optical images showing the ALP expression inside different microgels. (d) Quantified cell spreading data after 1 and 7 days of culture. (e) ALP coverage of the different constructs at day 7 and (f) Analyzed ALP activity after 7 days of culture. GelMA ALP data in (f) is taken with permission from ref. 25.
Figure 4Microdrop printing of cell-laden hydrogels into native-like tissue architectures.
(a) Schematic of the fabrication process and future applications of the developed platform (Illustration made by Tolpa Studios). (b) Various printed cell-laden microgel patterns. (c) hMSCs spreading within the patterned microgels (Green is obtained by filtering the brightfield channel with imageJ to remove noise-peaks). (d) Spatially controlled differentiation of hMSCs inside the patterned microgels.