| Literature DB >> 32932676 |
Arantza Perez-Valle1, Cristina Del Amo1, Isabel Andia1.
Abstract
Bioprinting technologies, which have the ability to combine various human cell phenotypes, signaling proteins, extracellular matrix components, and other scaffold-like biomaterials, are currently being exploited for the fabrication of human skin in regenerative medicine. We performed a systematic review to appraise the latest advances in 3D bioprinting for skin applications, describing the main cell phenotypes, signaling proteins, and bioinks used in extrusion platforms. To understand the current limitations of this technology for skin bioprinting, we briefly address the relevant aspects of skin biology. This field is in the early stage of development, and reported research on extrusion bioprinting for skin applications has shown moderate progress. We have identified two major trends. First, the biomimetic approach uses cell-laden natural polymers, including fibrinogen, decellularized extracellular matrix, and collagen. Second, the material engineering line of research, which is focused on the optimization of printable biomaterials that expedite the manufacturing process, mainly involves chemically functionalized polymers and reinforcement strategies through molecular blending and postprinting interventions, i.e., ionic, covalent, or light entanglement, to enhance the mechanical properties of the construct and facilitate layer-by-layer deposition. Skin constructs manufactured using the biomimetic approach have reached a higher level of complexity in biological terms, including up to five different cell phenotypes and mirroring the epidermis, dermis and hypodermis. The confluence of the two perspectives, representing interdisciplinary inputs, is required for further advancement toward the future translation of extrusion bioprinting and to meet the urgent clinical demand for skin equivalents.Entities:
Keywords: bioinks; bioprinting; cells; extrusion; regenerative medicine; skin
Year: 2020 PMID: 32932676 PMCID: PMC7555324 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21186679
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The main bioprinting technologies, printable biomaterials, and cell phenotypes used in skin bioprinting, as well as the main translational applications of this technology.
Figure 2PRISMA flow diagram of the literature search.
Studies involving a biomimetic approach with natural hydrogels (fibrinogen, dECM and collagen).
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| Jorgensen A.M. 2020 [ | Fibrinogen (30 mg/mL), Glycerol (100 µL/mL), Gelatin (35 mg/mL), HA (3 mg/mL), Aprotinin (40 µg/mL) | NO | Extrusion: Pneumatic; N. extrusors: Three; Nozzle Ø: 500 μm metal; Pressure: 60~90 kPa | Thrombin (20 IU/mL, 60 min, RT) | Proof-of-concept validation of full-thickness bioprinted skin constructs for wound closure. Testing and evaluation of printed skin grafts in mice. Construct evaluation: -SEM: analysis of the structure and morphology of the construct. Histology: H&E, Masson’s trichrome, and picrosirius red. Immunostaining: Lamin A + C, Pan-cytokeratin, Mel5, CD146, adiponectin, vimentin, ZO-1, keratin71 | |
| Liu X. 2020 [ | Fibrinogen (2.5 mg/mL), NovoGel component 2 (60 mg/mL) | NO | Nozzle Ø: 250 µm | Thrombin (1 U/mL, 24 h) | Bioprinting of vascularized full-thickness skin tissue equivalent of atopic dermatitis model for preclinical studies. Construct evaluation: Trans-epidermal electrical resistance measurement. Histology: H&E. Immunostaining: human collagen IV, laminin 5, integrin β, filaggrin, KRT10, loricrin, E-cadherin, CD-31, phalloidin, desmoglein, claudin-1. Cytokine measurement: ICAM, VCAM, VEGF-A, VEGF-C, VEGF-D | |
| Derr K. 2018 [ | NO | Thrombin (5 U/mL, 1.5 h, RT) | Fabrication of morphologically and physiologically relevant skin substitutes. Construct evaluation: Histology: H&E. Immunostaining: collagen I, collagen VII, Ki67, cytokeratin 15, ZO-1, claudin 1, e-cadherin, phalloidin, filaggrin. OCT imaging. Permeability. Barrier function | |||
| Hakimi N. 2018 [ | YES | Speed: 0.3–1.6 cm2/s | Thermal gelation, 30 min, CaCl2 (10 mM), Thrombin (50 IU) | Development of handheld printer for in situ bioprinting. Proof-of-concept in mice and porcine wound model. Construct evaluation: SEM for surface microstructure. Histology: H&E. Immunostaining: phalloidin, F-actin, keratin 14, keratin 10, α-SMA | ||
| Seol Y.J. 2018 [ | Fibrinogen (20 mg/mL), Gelatin (30 mg/mL), HA (3 mg/mL), Glycerol (10% | NO | Extrusion: Pneumatic; Nozzle Ø: Teflon 300 µm; Pressure: 60 kPa | Thrombin (20 U/mL) | Bioengineered skin substitute combined with a wound dressing layer for facial wounds; Construct evaluation: Wound contraction measure in vivo. Histology: H&E | |
| Cubo N. 2017 [ | NO | Extruders: two; Flow: 12 mL/min | Functional human bi-layered skin tested in immunodeficient mice model; Construct evaluation: Histology: H&E. Immunostaining: vimentin, keratin 5, keratin 10, filagrin, collagen VII, SMA | |||
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| Kim B.S. 2019 [ | NO | Development of a novel printing platform for a full-thickness skin model using dECM with a vascular channel. Construct evaluation: Histology: H&E, Masson’s trichrome., Immunostaining: CD31, keratin 10, filaggrin, laminin, collagen type I, fibronectin, BODIPY, p63, keratin 19, Ki67. Permeability of vascular channel | ||||
| Won J.Y. 2019 [ | dECM (2–3%) | hFBs (1.5 × 106 cells) | YES | Nozzle Ø: 500 µm | 37 °C, 30 min | Promotion of skin regeneration as well as the survival and proliferation of skin-derived cells by the application of dECM cell-laden bioink to form skin substitutes. Construct evaluation: Microarrays for gene expression of ECM, skin development and morphology |
| Kim B.S. 2018 [ | YES | 37 °C, 30 min | Fabrication of human full-skin pre-vascularized equivalent using dECM by printing different layers. Construct evaluation: Transepithelial electrical resistance, -Water permeability of the construct. SEM for bioink microstructure. Histology: H&E, Masson’s trichrome, Alcian blue. Immunostaining: keratin 10, involucrin, collagen type-I, fibronectin, decorin, laminin. Gene expression: collagen type-I, fibronectin, decorin, collagen type-III, vimentin, keratinocyte growth factor. In vivo wound healing. In vivo construct histology: H&E, re-epithelialization. In vivo construct immunostaining: CD31, cytokeratin. In vivo blood flow measurement | |||
| Ahn G. 2017 [ | s-dECM (2.5%) Acidic pepsin | mFBs | YES | Extrusion: pneumatic; Nozzle Ø: 250 µm, Pressure: 60 kPa, Speed: 125 mm/min | Development of printing strategy of cell-laden dECM constructs by inducing simultaneous gelation. Construct evaluation: SEM to measure pore size. Immunostaining: F-actin | |
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| Baltazar T. 2020 [ | NO | Extrusion: Pneumatic; | 37 °C | Fabrication of 3D bioprinted bilayered skin grafts. Construct evaluation: Histology: H&E. Immunostaining: filaggrin, cytokeratin 14, cytokeratin 10, collagen type-IV, Ki67, laminin 5, CD31. Endothelial network stability. In vivo graft histology: H&E, vascularization. In vivo graft immunostaining: cytokeratin 14, cytokeratin 10, Lectin I, GSL-B4, laminin 5, CD31, F4/80, involucrin. In vivo vascularization by perfusion | ||
| Kajave N.S. 2020 [ | CMA (3 mg/mL), VA-086 photoinitiator (1%) | hMSCs (1 × 105) | YES | Nozzle Ø: 210 µm, Flow: 5 mm/s | (I) UV (365 nm/17 mW/cm2, 1 min); (II) Genipin (0.5 mM or 1 mM, 1 h, 37 °C) | Development of stable and printable CMA hydrogels with dual crosslinking process |
| Osidak E.O. 2019 [ | Collagen ViscollTM (collagen I, 20, 30, and 40 mg/mL) neutralized in acetic acid (20 mM) | mFBs (0.5 × 106) | YES | Nozzle Ø: 250 µm, Temp: 15 °C, Flow: 5 mm/min | Printing bed at 37 °C for instant gelification | Adaptation of commercial Viscoll collagen to a bioink for 3D bioprinting of cell-laden constructs |
| Attalla R. 2018 [ | CaCl2 (100 mM); Alginate (0.5%), Collagen (2.5 mg/mL) or Alginate (1%), Fibrinogen (25 mg/mL) | HUVEC + RFP; mFBs + GFP; Cell concentration: 2 × 106 | YES | N. extrusors: three. (I) Nozzle Ø: 260 µm; (II) Nozzle Ø: 630 µm; (III) Nozzle Ø: 830 µm. Flow: 1–6 mL/min; Speed: 1–16 m/min | Fabrication of complex heterogeneous bi- and tri-layered hollow channels within multi-layered scaffolds using multi-axial nozzle. Construct evaluation: Cell distribution in the hollow channels | |
| Shi Y. 2018 [ | Collagen I-rat (8%), GelMA (5%), Tyrosinase (300 U/mL), I2959 photoinitiator (0.1%) | hMCs (3 × 104), hKCs (1 × 106), hFBs (1 × 106) | YES | Nozzle Ø: 200 µm, Temp: 17 °C, Pressure: 0.8–1.2 bar, Speed: 7–10 mm/s | UV (365 nm, 40 s) | Development of skin substitutes with GelMA bioink doped with tyrosinase enhancing the wound closure in vivo (rats) and prevention of scar formation. Construct evaluation: SEM: cell morphology. Histology: H&E. Wound closure measurement |
| Kim B.S. 2017 [ | NO | 37 °C, for at least 30 min | Development of a hybrid and versatile 3D direct cell-printing system for human skin model biofabrication. Construct evaluation: Histology: H&E. Immunostaining: collagen type I, keratin 10, involucrin. Epidermis thickness | |||
a-dECM, adipose-derived decellularized extracellular matrix; CMA, acid solubilized methacrylated collagen solution; cm2, square centimeter; DMEM, Dubelcco’s modified Eagles medium; ECMs, extracellular matrix; EPCs, endothelial progenitor cells; FBS, fetal bovine serum; FDPCs, follicle dermal papillary cells; G, gauge; GelMA, gelatin-methacrylamide; GFP, green fluorescent protein; GSL-B4, griffonia gimplicifolia gectin I isolectin B4; h, hours; HA, hyaluronic acid; hASCs, human adipose tissue-derived stem cells; hDMECs, human dermal microvascular endothelial cells; hECs, human endothelial cells; hFBs, primary human fibroblasts; hKCs, human keratinocytes; hMCs, human melanocytes; hMSCs, human mesenchymal stem cells; hNKCs, human neonatal keratinocytes; hNFBs, human neonatal fibroblasts; hPCs, human pericytes; HUVECs, human umbilical vein endothelial cell; H&E: hematoxylin and eosin; ICAM, intercellular adhesion molecules; IU, international units; I2959, Irgacure D-2959 (2-hydroxy-1-[4-(2-hydroxyethoxy) phenyl]-2-methyl-1-propanone); kDa, kilodalton; kPa, kilopascal; m, meter; mFBs, mouse fibroblasts; min, minute; mg, milligram; mL, milliliter; mm, millimeter; mM, millimolar; MPa, megapascal; MW, molecular weight; mW, milliwatts; NaCl, sodium chloride; s, seconds; RFP, red fluorescent protein; RT, room temperature; SMA, smooth muscle actin; s-dECM, skin-derived decellularized extracellular matrix; SEM: scanning electron microscope; TG, transglutaminase; U, units; UV, ultraviolet; VCAM, Vascular cell adhesion protein; W, watts; w/v, weight/volume; µm, micrometer.
Studies focused on printable biomaterials that expedite the manufacturing process.
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| Crook J.M. 2020 [ | Alginate (5% | iPSCs (20–40 × 106 cells) | NO | Needle Ø: 19 G, 1 mL syringe, Pressure: 0.3 bar, Speed: 9 mm/s, Temp: 15 °C | CaCl2 (2% | Immunophenotyping (OCT4, SSEA4, TRA-1-‘60, TRA-1-81), Cell viability |
| Motealleh A. 2019 [ | Alginate and Nanocomposites (DXPPMO-L-Asp-Alg and DXPPMO-D-Asp-Alg) | hDFs and mFBs (10,000 cells) | NO | Not reported | CaCl2 (22.5 M, 10 min) | 3D bioprinted triphasic chiral nanocomposite hydrogels to study the effect of the addition of nanocomposites and the chirality of enantiomers in cell activities. Cell morphology, adhesion, and migration |
| Ooi H.W. 2018 [ | Alginate (2%), 5-Norbornene-2-methylamine and RGD Peptide Sequence (CGGGRGDS); photoinitiator and PEG linker | MFBs, ATDC5 Chondrocytes | YES | Metal needle Ø: 25 G Speed: 10 mm/s, Pressure: 30 kPa | UV (365 nm, 10 mW/cm2, 60 s) | Development of bioink with modified alginate, allowing its printability with low alginate concentration and high cell viability |
| Raddatz L. 2018 [ | Alginate (0.5, 1, 2, 3 and 4% | hASCs and mFBs-GFP (5 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Nozzle Ø: 0.256 mm Temp. platform: 37 °C Temp. syringes: RT, Pressure: 90.3 mPa | CaCl2 (500 mM, nebulized) | Development of a calcium chloride nebulizer to reduce the negative impact of high concentrations of CaCl2 on cell-laden bioinks |
| Shi P. 2017 [ | Alginate (2%, 5%, and 10%) | mFBs (5 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Nozzle Ø: 27 G | CaCl2 (100 mM, 5 min) | Analysis of the effect of hydrogel stiffness on cell activities of fibroblast in bioprinted cell-laden alginate hydrogels |
| Dubbin K. 2016 [ | Alginate (2%), P1 peptide (2 mg) and C7 protein polymer (10%) | mFBs and hASCs (10 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Blunt-tipped nozzle Ø: 32 G, Pressure: 10 psi, Speed: 4 mm/s | CaCl2 (10 mM, 10 min) | Study of the effect of two crosslinking processes in two component bioink to ensure high cell viability |
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| Tigner T.J. 2020 [ | GelNB (10% | mFBs (2 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Needle Ø: 18 G; 5, 10 and 15 mm/s printing speed; 2–4 mm/s extrusion speed | Continuous exposure to UV (365 nm), Intensity: 5 mW/cm2 (LAP); 20 mW/cm2 (I2959) | Comparative analysis of photocrosslinkable gelatin derivatives (GelNB vs. GelMA) combined with different photoinitiators (LAP vs. I2959) |
| Pepelanova I. 2018 [ | GelMA (5% | HASCs (1.5 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Needle Ø: 0.40 mm, Pressure: 2.8–3.8 psi, Temp: 30 °C or 37 °C, Speed: 260 mm/min | UV (365 nm, 1.2 J/cm2, 25 °C) | Improvement of extrusion bioprinting by adding biocompatibles additives to increase the hydrogel viscosity (SiNPs and the novel AlgHEMA). Hydrogel brings a cell-promoting microenvironment for hADSCs |
| Liu W. 2017 [ | GelMA (3%, 4%, 5%) and Photoinitiator (0.5%) | HUVECs (4 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Cone-shaped nozzles and straight nozzle, Ø: 27 G; Temp: 21 °C; Speed: 400 mm/min 100 µL/min feeding rate | UV (3.95 W/cm2, 30 s) | Development of GelMA constructs that support cell viability, survival, and spreading |
| Ouyang L. 2017 [ | MeHA (2.5 wt %), NorHA (2 wt %), GelMA (5 wt %), PEGDA (5 wt %), I2959 or LAP photoinitiator (0.05 wt %) | mFBs (2.5 × 106 cells/mL) | NO | Coaxial system: Core needle Ø: 23/24 G; shell needle Ø: 18 G; Flow rate: 0.4 mL/h | In-situ crosslinking UV (10–15 mW/cm2) or visible light | Development of a extrusion technology to print simple or complex filaments (core/shell) using a general strategy for photocrosslinkable hydrogels |
| Rutz A.L. 2015 [ | Gelatin type A (5% | HDFs, HUVECs, hMSCs | YES | Nozzle Ø: 200 μm Pressure: 1–2.5 bar Speed: 5 mm/s (1–2 h of bioink incubation prior to printing at 37 °C) | (I) UV (365 nm, 15–20 mW/cm2, 10 min); (II) Thrombin (10 U/mL) and CaCl2 (40 mM) for 30 min | Development of versatile and cell-compatible bioink printing method for creating soft, printable gels from a variety of synthetic and natural polymers |
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| Bociaga D. 2019 [ | Alginate (5% | hECs | YES | Flat-tip needle Ø: 430 µm, length: 16 mm) Temp: 34 °C, 37 °C, 40 °C. Thickness: 0.35 mm | CaCl2 (2%) | Control of mechanical properties, cell survival after extrusion, and degradation rate of hydrogels prepared in water vs. [DMEM + 10% FBS] |
| Compaan A.M. 2019 [ | (I) Gelatin (5–10% | mFBs (5 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Gellan bath enabled extrusion bioprinting; Stainless steel tips Ø: 23 G, Speed: 2.5–10 mm/s; Thickness: 0.1–0.15 mm | Analysis of the versatility and advantages of using gellan gum-based fluid gel formulations as a support bath material for the bioprinting of 3D hydrogels and the addition of TG for the gelation of native gelatin. Analysis of postprinting stability with different crosslinking protocols. Living fibroblasts spread and multiply, cell extension and cell–cell contacts better with bioink II (Gellan) | |
| Liu P. 2019 [ | Alginate (2 wt %), Gelatin (15 wt %) | hAECs, WJMSCs 1 × 106 cells/mL | YES | Pressure: 0.2 Mpa, Nozzle Ø: 0.33 μm, Speed: 7 mm/s, Temp: 30 °C | Cell phenotypes, gene expression microarrays: differentially expressed genes hAECs vs. hWJMSCs. Human AECs superior epithelial cells phenotype, WJMSCs superior angiogenic potential and fibroblastic phenotype. Uniform cell distribution. Cell viability > 95% | |
| Giuseppe M.D. 2018 [ | Performance of different alginate/gelatin blends, i.e., 9% Alg/6% Gel; 5% Alg/10% Gel; 7% Alg/8% Gel | sMSCs | YES | Nozzle Ø: 27 G, Speed: 5 mm/s, Temp: 25 °C | CaCl2 (300 mM, 15 min) | Optimized printability with alginate (7%)/gelatin (8%) (POI determination). Compressive modulus. Cell survival 92% |
| Li Z. 2018 [ | Alginate (2.4%) Gelatin (12%) with varying solvent strengths | mESCs (1 × 107 cells) | YES | Pre-cooling of the bioink at 0 °C for 30 min, Printing temp: 10 °C | CaCl2 (10%, 0 °C, 10 min) | Description of the effect of solvents on printability, mechanical properties, and cell behavior (viability, proliferation, aggregation, differentiation). Bioink designed for regenerating sweat glands |
| Liu W. 2018 [ | HUVECs, MCF-7, mFBs | YES | Coaxial system. 23 G core Ø: 23 G, Ø sheath: 28 G. Speed: 500 mm/min | UV (3.95 W/cm2) | Development of cell-laden constructs at low concentrations of GelMa (< 2%) | |
| He Y. 2016 [ | Alginate (2.5%) and Gelatin (8%) | L929 mFBs (1 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Temp: 37 °C nozzle and 5 °C substrate. Pressure: 20 KPa, nozzle Ø: 0.3 mm. Speed: 4.45 mm/s | CaCl2 (2% | Identification of the most important parameters for good printability: viscosity range, air pressure, nozzle Ø, distance between nozzle and substrate. Control of printing quality. Diffusion within and between layers. Cell viability |
| Ouyang L. 2016 [ | Gelatin (7.5% | mESCs | YES | Stainless steel needle Ø: 25 G, Extrusion flux: 0.68 uL/s. Temp: nozzle at 30 °C, chamber at 22.5 °C | CaCl2 (100 mM, 3 min) | Assessment of printability of gelatin/alginate bioinks. Shear stress determination. ESC viability: 95%, cell spreading |
| Wu Z. 2016 [ | Alginate (1%), Gelatin (10%) and Collagen (from bovine Achilles tendon, 0.82 mg/mL) | hCECs (1 × 106 cells/mL) | NO | Not reported | CaCl2 (3%, 37 °C, 3 min) | Incorporation of collagen to the bioink to precisely mimic tissue ECM yielding high cell viability and good printability. Effect of sodium citrate on degradation. Cell viability |
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| Montheil T. 2020 [ | HPMC | hMSCs (1 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Pressure: 45 ± 5 psi; Conical tip Ø: 27 G, Temp: 37 °C, Speed: 10 mm/s | 24 h, 37 °C | Determination of the printing window, Physicochemical analyses |
| Zidaric T. 2020 [ | Alginate (3 wt %), CMC (3 wt %) and NFC (1.5 wt %) | hDFs (106 cells/mL) | YES | Nozzle Ø: 0.25 mm | CaCl2 (pouring 2 wt % for 1 min) | Wettability, Swelling ratio, In vitro degradation, Cell viability |
| Mendes B.B. 2019 [ | Aldehyde-CNC (2.88 wt %) and platelet lysate (160 mg/mL of total dry mass) | hASCs(2 × 106/mL PL) | YES | Dual-extrusor with a static mixer, Stainless steel needle Ø: 27 G, Speed: 5 mm/s, Temp: 20 °C | h-thrombin from plasma (5 U/mL) CaCl2 (10 mM, 1 h, 37 °C) | Free-form fabrication, Hierarchical fibrillary architecture, Molecular diffusion, Cell viability > 90%, Metabolic activity, Collagen synthesis after 9 days |
| Law N. 2018 [ | Hyaluronic acid-7 (0.25–2 wt %) and Methylcellulose (0.5–9 wt %) | sMSCs | YES | Pressure: 160–175 kpa, Ø: 23 G, Speed: 3 mm/s speed, Temp: extruder at 4 °C, plate at 37 °C | 37 °C, 5% CO2, 1 h | Swelling and stability, Compression behavior, Cell viability post-printing, Long-term cell viability (2 weeks) |
| Li H. 2017 [ | Alginate (3%), methylcellulose (9%) and CaCl2, Trisodium citrate to enhance interfacial adhesion | L929 mFBs (3 × 106 cells/mL) in 15 mg/mL trisodium citrate | YES | Syringe 1: nozzle Ø: 25 G, Pressure: 4 bar; Syringe 2: nozzle Ø: 27 G, Pressure < 0.1 bar; Speed: 7.6–156.7 mm/s; Temp: 20 °C | CaCl2 bath (40 mg/mL, 10 min) | Printability, Mechanical properties, Degradation behavior, Thixotropic properties, Morphology, Cell viability > 95% |
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| Pisani S. 2020 [ | Chitosan (4.5–6% | hDFs (2 × 105 cell/mL) | YES | Needle Ø: 22 G and Ø: 25 G. Pressure (chitosan): 25–40 kPa and 5–10 kPa (Gamma-PGA). Speed: 600 mm/min Temp: 37 °C | No | Morphology, Stability (up to 35 d), Physicochemical characterization, Cell viability > 60% |
| Li Y. 2018 [ | Hydroxypropil chitin (HPCH, 5 wt %, 0.4–0.6 mL) and Matrigel (0–0.3 mL) | hiPSCs (1 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Nozzle Ø: 260 μm (160–360 μm), Speed: 2–6 mm/s, Temp: 15 °C–37 °C | CaCl2 (1% | Thermal sensitive hydrogel printability, Cell viability (day 0), Proliferation (day 7), Morphology (0–7 d), Aggregation (10 d), Apoptosis (day 1), Pluripotency (qRT-PCR, day 10) |
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| Wang L.L. 2018 [ | Nor-HA, HA-HYD, HA-ALD, I2959 photoinitiator (0.05%) and PETMA crosslinker | mFBs (2 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Nozzle Ø: 25 G, Speed: 40 mm/s | UV irradiation (365 nm, 10 mW/cm2, 2 min). | HA-HYD and HA-ALD characterization, Mechanical properties, Cell viability > 80% |
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| Pereira R.F. 2018 [ | PECMA (macromere conc. 1.5 or 2.5 wt %), I2959 (0.05 wt %), CaCl2 (0–5 mM) | hDFs | YES | Metal cylindrical nozzle Ø: 23 G; Temp: 20 °C; Construct, 15 layers | Dual crosslinking: UV photopolimerization (160 s, 7 mW/cm2), Ionic gelation (CaCl2, 5 mM 1 h under agitation) | Biofunctionalization of PECMA, Mechanical properties, Swelling, Cell viability and spreading, Deposition of ECM (fibronectin) |
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| Rutz A.L. 2019 [ | PEG-SH/PEG-NH2 inks (base polymer (20%) + PEG crosslinker (10%)) | hDFs (2 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Stainless steel nozzle Ø: 200 µm, 2 mm length. Pressure: 5 bar | Covalent amine-activated ester crosslinking | Optimization of PEG bioinks, Mechanical properties, Cell viability |
| Xin S. 2019 [ | PEG microgel produced by electrospraying and thiol-ene click chemistry | hMSCs (5 × 106 cells/mL) | YES | Nozzles Ø: 840 and 600 µm | UV (60 mW/cm2, 365 nm, 3 min) | Gel morphology, Printability of complex structures, Cell viability up to 10 d |
AlgHEMA, alginate derivatives; Asp, L(D)-Aspartic acid; cCNCs, carboxylated-cellulose nanocrystals; CMA, acid-solubilized methacrylated collagen solution; cm2, square centimeter; a-CNC, aldehyde- cellulose nanocrystals; CNC, cellulose nanocrystals; d, days; DXP, N,N’-bis(2,6-dimethylphenyl)perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxylicdiimide; ECMs, extracellular matrix; FBS, fetal bovine serum; G, gauge; Gamma-PGA, gamma-poly(glutamic acid); GelMA, gelatin-methacrylamide; GelNB, gelatin-norbornene; GFP, green fluorescent protein; h, hours; HA, hyaluronic acid; HA-HYD, hyaluronic acid with hydrazides; HA-ALD, hyaluronic acid with aldehydes; hAECs, human amniotic epithelial cells; HAHYD, HA with hydrazone bonds; HAMC, hyaluronic acid and methylcellulose; hASCs, human adipose tissue-derived stem cells; hCECs, human corneal epithelial cells; hDFs, human dermal fibroblasts; hECs, human endothelial cells; HEPES, 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid; hESCs, human embryonic stem cells; hFBs, primary human fibroblasts; hMSCs, human mesenchymal stem cells; HPCH, hydroxypropyl chitin; HPMC, hybrid hydroxypropyl methyl cellulose; hiPSCs, human-induced pluripotent stem cell; HUVECs, human umbilical vein endothelial cell; H&E: Hematoxylin and eosin; IU, international units; I2959, Irgacure D-2959 (2-hydroxy-1-[4-(2-hydroxyethoxy) phenyl]-2-methyl-1-propanone); kDa, kilodalton; kPa, kilopascal; LAP, lithium phenyl-2,4,6-trimethylbenzoylphosphinate; m, meter; MCC, microcrystalline cellulose; MCF-7, Michigan Cancer Foundation-7 breast cancer cell line; MeHA, methacrylated hyaluronic acid; mESCs, mouse embryonic stem cells; mFBs, mouse fibroblasts; min, minute; mg, miligram; mL, milliliter; mm, millimeter; mM, millimolar; MNCs, mononuclear cells; MPa, megapascal; MW, molecular weight; mW, milliwatts; Na-Alg, sodium alginate; NaCl, sodium chloride; NaF, sodium fluoride; NC, chiral nanocomposite; -NH2, amine crosslinking; NorHA, functionalyzed HA with norbornene groups; PCL, polycaprolactone; PECMA, pectin methacrylate; PEG, polyethylene glycol; PEGDA, poly-(ethylene glycol) diacrylate; PEGX, PEG-crosslinker; PETMA, pentaerythritol tetramercaptoacetate; PMO, periodic mesoporous organosilica; PGA, polyglycolic acid; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; s, seconds; RGD, tripeptide arginine–glycine–aspartate; RT, room temperature; SEM: scanning electron microscope; s, seconds; sMSCs, sheep mesenchymal stem cells; -SH, –thiol crosslinking; SiNPs, silicate nanoparticles; TEER, transepidermal electrical resistance; TG, transglutaminase; TGFß, transforming growth factor beta; TSC, trisodium citrate; U, units; UV, ultraviolet; WJMSCs, Wharton’s jelly-derived mesenchymal stem cells; W, watts; w/v, weight/volume; μm, micrometer.
Technology readiness level (TRL) definition and bioprinting TRL adaptation. The definition of TRLs proposed in the EU framework program projects (Horizon 2020, H2020) are listed in column 2. The bioprinting TRLs, shown in column 3, were adapted from the Medical Device Scale [89,90]. Indicates how far has evolved skin extrusion bioprinting; ●/○ indicates research category implementation/ non-implementation. The different colors group together, in more general terms, the different TRLs.
| TRL | Technology Readiness Level Scale Proposed by H2020 | Bioprinting TRL Adaptation | Research | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In Vitro | In Vivo Animal | In Vivo Human | ||||
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| Basic principles observed | Review of the scientific literature to establish the starting point for the characterization of the new technology and procedure. |
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| Technology concept formulated | Development of hypothesis and experimental designs for addressing the related scientific issues. |
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| Experimental proof of concept | Beginning of the research. Identification of candidate and/or target. In vitro demonstration of activity of skin constructs. Generation of preliminary in vivo proof-of-concept efficacy data (non-GLP (Good Laboratory Practice)). | ● | ● |
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| Technology validated in lab | Optimization and Non-GLP in vivo demonstration of activity, toxicity and efficacy of the skin construct. Manufacture of the product at laboratory-scale (i.e., non-GMP (Good Manufacturing Practice)) | ● | ● |
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| Technology validated in relevant environment | Advanced characterization of skin constructs (non-GLP in vivo studies, animal model, and assay development) Establishment of preliminary target product profiles. Initiation of the development of a scalable and reproducible manufacturing process according to GMP standards. | ● | ● |
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| Technology demonstrated in relevant environment | GMP Pilot Lot Production. Phase 1 clinical trial(s): Determination of an initial safety pharmacokinetics and immunogenicity as well as other properties of the clinical product. | ● | ● | ● | ||
| System prototype demonstration in operational environment | Scale-up and initiation of GMP process validation. Phase 2 clinical trial(s). | ● | ● | ● | ||
| System complete and qualified | Completion of GMP validation and consistency lot manufacturing. Animal efficacy studies, Phase 3 clinical trials, as well as any other extended clinical safety trials that are appropriate for the product Regulatory issues or product licensure. |
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| Actual system proven in operational environment | Phase 4 studies (post-marketing commitments), safety surveillance, studies to support use in special populations, and clinical trials to confirm safety and efficacy as feasible and appropriate. Maintenance of manufacturing capability. |
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Figure 3(A) Display of the reviewed publications according to the stage of development; (B) Distribution of analyzed bioinks for extrusion bioprinting according to technological development.