| Literature DB >> 32041994 |
V Goranov1,2, T Shelyakova3, R De Santis4, Y Haranava5, A Makhaniok5, A Gloria4, A Tampieri6, A Russo7, E Kon8,9,10, M Marcacci8,9, L Ambrosio4, V A Dediu11.
Abstract
A three dimensional magnetic patterning of two cell types was realised in vitro inside an additive manufactured magnetic scaffold, as a conceptual precursor for the vascularised tissue. The realisation of separate arrangements of vascular and osteoprogenitor cells, labelled with biocompatible magnetic nanoparticles, was established on the opposite sides of the scaffold fibres under the effect of non-homogeneous magnetic gradients and loading magnetic configuration. The magnetisation of the scaffold amplified the guiding effects by an additional trapping of cells due to short range magnetic forces. The mathematical modelling confirmed the strong enhancement of the magnetic gradients and their particular geometrical distribution near the fibres, defining the preferential cell positioning on the micro-scale. The manipulation of cells inside suitably designed magnetic scaffolds represents a unique solution for the assembling of cellular constructs organised in biologically adequate arrangements.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32041994 PMCID: PMC7010825 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-58738-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Microscopic imaging of magnetized cells (a–d): (a) Light microscopy of HUVEC; (b) Fluorescent microscopy of HUVEC; (c) Light microscopy of MSCs; (d) Fluorescent microscopy of MSCs; (e) Average SSC signal intensity of MSCs (circles) and HUVECs (squares) for 100 pg/cell concentration of MNPs, where the selected area indicates the stability interval; (f) The viability of magnetically labelled MSC cells according to MTT test; (g) The viability of magnetically labelled HUVEC cells according to MTT test.
Figure 2Accumulation of magnetically labelled MSCs by magnet (fluorescent microscopy, magnification 10X): (a) starting time, (b) final cell arrangement; (c) Motility threshold as function of MNP concentration (n = 6, p < 0.01).
Figure 3Experimental setup for 3D assembling of magnetically labelled cells inside the magnetic scaffold.
Figure 4Micro-spatial patterning of magnetically labelled cells in magnetized scaffolds (bar 200 µm): (a) magnetic PCL/FeHA scaffold; (b) non-magnetic PCL/HA scaffold; (c) schematic illustration of magnetically assembled 3D cellular architectures.
Figure 5Magnetic gradient in T/m units: (a) distribution in the scaffold region: colour scale indicates the magnitude while arrows show the direction of gradient and hence the direction of magnetic forces; (b) zooming around one fibre section, where green area delineates the attraction region (A), and grey area indicates the repulsion region (R); (c) gradient distribution along the dashed line in (a).
Benchmarking magnetic technology versus basic 3D cell printing approaches.
| Laser-assisted[ | Inkjet[ | Microextrusion[ | Magnetic assembling | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advantages | (1) Single cell manipulation (2) Nozzle free (3) Usage of high viscosity bio-ink (4) High resolution (5) High accuracy (6) High gelation speed | (1) High cell viability (2) Noncontact nozzle (3) Printed cell patterns using different cell types (4) Heterogeneous multicellular constructs (5) High throughput (6) High gelation speed | (1) High mechanical properties (2) Short fabrication time (3) Printing of various types and viscosities of bio-ink (4) Wide range of biocompatible materials | (1) High cell viability (2) Remote control of cell distribution in deep scaffold space (3) Simultaneous assembling of large number of cells (5) Simple and rapid methodology (6) Heterogeneous multicellular constructs |
| Disadvantages | (1) Low mechanical properties (2) Long fabrication time (3) Damage cells due to heat generated from laser energy (4) Aggregate in the final tissue construct | (1) Low mechanical and structural integrity (2) Long fabrication time (3) Low upper limit for viscosity of bio-ink (4)Low reproducibility (5) Cell aggregation (6) Clogging of the nozzle orifice | (1) Low cell viability due to nozzle wall shear stress and mechanical stress (2) Low accuracy (3) Cell death due to changes in dispensing pressure and bio-ink concentration | (1) Magnetic labeling of cells is mandatory (2) Spatial control over cells distribution is established only for large ensembles, and not for a single cell (3) Spatial distribution strongly depends on the scaffold geometry and magnetization |