| Literature DB >> 31010289 |
Feng Cheng1,2, Xia Cao1,3, Hongbin Li1,2, Tingting Liu1, Xin Xie1, Di Huang1, Sushila Maharjan1, Ho Pan Bei1, Ameyalli Gómez1, Jun Li1, Haoqun Zhan1,4, Haokai Shen1,5, Sanwei Liu6, Jinmei He2, Yu Shrike Zhang1.
Abstract
Due to the combined advantages of cellulose and nanoscale (diameter 20-60 nm), bacterial cellulose possesses a series of attractive features including its natural origin, moderate biosynthesis process, good biocompatibility, and cost-effectiveness. Moreover, bacterial cellulose nanofibers can be conveniently processed into three-dimensional (3D) intertwined structures and form stable paper devices after simple drying. These advantages make it suitable as the material for construction of organ-on-a-chip devices using matrix-assisted sacrificial 3D printing. We successfully fabricated various microchannel structures embedded in the bulk bacterial cellulose hydrogels and retained their integrity after the drying process. Interestingly, these paper-based devices containing hollow microchannels could be rehydrated and populated with relevant cells to form vascularized tissue models. As a proof-of-concept demonstration, we seeded human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) into the microchannels to obtain the vasculature and inoculated the MCF-7 cells onto the surrounding matrix of the paper device to build a 3D paper-based vascularized breast tumor model. The results showed that the microchannels were perfusable, and both HUVECs and MCF-7 cells exhibited favorable proliferation behaviors. This study may provide a new strategy for constructing simple and low-cost in vitro tissue models, which may find potential applications in drug screening and personalized medicine.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial cellulose; breast cancer; embedded 3D printing; microphysiological systems; sacrificial 3D printing; vascularization
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31010289 PMCID: PMC6820351 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b00583
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189