| Literature DB >> 28388499 |
Marco Costantini1, Stefano Testa2, Pamela Mozetic1, Andrea Barbetta3, Claudia Fuoco2, Ersilia Fornetti2, Francesco Tamiro2, Sergio Bernardini2, Jakub Jaroszewicz4, Wojciech Święszkowski4, Marcella Trombetta1, Luisa Castagnoli2, Dror Seliktar5, Piotr Garstecki6, Gianni Cesareni2, Stefano Cannata2, Alberto Rainer7, Cesare Gargioli8.
Abstract
We present a new strategy for the fabrication of artificial skeletal muscle tissue with functional morphologies based on an innovative 3D bioprinting approach. The methodology is based on a microfluidic printing head coupled to a co-axial needle extruder for high-resolution 3D bioprinting of hydrogel fibers laden with muscle precursor cells (C2C12). To promote myogenic differentiation, we formulated a tailored bioink with a photocurable semi-synthetic biopolymer (PEG-Fibrinogen) encapsulating cells into 3D constructs composed of aligned hydrogel fibers. After 3-5 days of culture, the encapsulated myoblasts started migrating and fusing, forming multinucleated myotubes within the 3D bioprinted fibers. The obtained myotubes showed high degree of alignment along the direction of hydrogel fiber deposition, further revealing maturation, sarcomerogenesis, and functionality. Following subcutaneous implantation in the back of immunocompromised mice, bioprinted constructs generated organized artificial muscle tissue in vivo. Finally, we demonstrate that our microfluidic printing head allows to design three dimensional multi-cellular assemblies with an exquisite compartmentalization of the encapsulated cells. Our results demonstrate an enhanced myogenic differentiation with the formation of parallel aligned long-range myotubes. The approach that we report here represents a robust and valid candidate for the fabrication of macroscopic artificial muscle to scale up skeletal muscle tissue engineering for human clinical application.Entities:
Keywords: Artificial muscle; Microfluidic enhanced 3D bioprinting; Myogenic precursor cells; Myotubes; PEG-Fibrinogen hydrogel
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28388499 DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2017.03.026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomaterials ISSN: 0142-9612 Impact factor: 12.479